The parents of a 9-year-old boy at the center of a case involving allegations of abuse were back in a Miami courtroom Wednesday. 

Marsee Strong and Edward Bernard Bailey are out of jail on bond after being charged with aggravated child abuse and child neglect. 

The parents walked into the juvenile courtroom to hear the results of a medical report compiled on their 9-year-old son. 

Last month, the boy climbed out of a window and was found naked and alone wandering in the street near his North Miami Beach home. He weighed just 35 pounds, about half of what doctors said a child his age should weigh. 

Once at the hospital, doctors determined the boy was severely malnourished and told police he was begging nurses for food. More than a hundred marks and other scars could be seen all over his body. 

The medical tests have finally come back on that severely malnourished boy.

The report concludes that the boy's injuries were both self-inflicted and inflicted by someone else. 

"We still don't know who did this to this bo," said Miami-Dade Circuit Court Judge Cindy Lederman. 

Department of Children and Families workers revealed to the judge that another sibling within the home was known to beat the 9-year-old. 

"There's no evidence Mom or Dad did anything wrong," said an attorney representing the Department of Children and Families. "Could they have done more? Yes." 

The medical tests were also inconclusive about the cause of the boy's chronic malnutrition. 

Several doctors from Jackson Memorial Hospital, where the boy is being treated, were in the courtroom to deliver the report and testify on the boy's condition. All health care professional agreed that the boy suffers from a mental health disorder and is known to overeat to the point of vomiting. The court hearing was an arraignment where formal charges are presented to the judge. However, dependency cases in juvenile court are considered civil and are handled separately from criminal charges in state court. 

Wednesday's hearing was aimed at determining the level of care and custody the family should have over all six of the couple's children. A worst-case scenario would involve the parents being stripped of all of their parental rights. This did not happen. 

A plea was entered on the parents' behalf as the judge made it clear that she believed the parents had a greater responsibility of keeping their son safe.    

Four of the six kids are in DCF care, including the 9-year old boy who is still recovering at Jackson Memorial Hospital. He will be released within a few days to a medical foster home. 

All of the information collected in juvenile court is being presented to the State Attorney's Office, where prosecutors will have the option of reducing or dropping the criminal charges against the parents. 

Another hearing has been set for March 7.