Memphis police officers responded to a call of shots fired at Wolfchase Galleria Sunday afternoon, according to a tweet from MPD.

The call was made for the mall's parking lot at 2700 North Germantown Parkway.

No victim has been located, and it appears to be a shots fire call only, MPD tweeted at 4:13 p.m. Officers cleared the area and the mall.

The mall closed for the day shortly after police arrived.

No shooting occurred inside the mall, MPD Lt. Karen Randolph said in an email. It is believed that the suspects fled the scene.

MPD tweeted photos of three men believed to be connected to the shooting and who were possibly in a grey Nissan Altima and fled the scene after the shooting occurred, the tweet said.

Angie Solis, 24, works in the Dillard’s sunglasses department. At approximately 3:45 p.m., people began reacting to the alleged shots fired, she said.

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“All I hear is a lot of screaming, and I then I see people pouring in the door, screaming, crying and running over each other,” Solis said from a parking lot across the mall.

At that point, she and co-workers were escorted to the back and told there had been a shooting. One claimed to have heard an assault rifle.

This is Solis’s first retail job. She worked at a club previously, but hadn’t encountered an experience like this. She had thoughts in the moment that “this may be something serious.”

“This really just scared me,” Solis said. “Just seeing the fear in people faces.”

The mall has a recent history of fighting and shooting incidents.

In December 2017, seven people were arrested in conjunction with fights and a shooting at the mall that occurred on Dec. 26. Three people were wounded by gunfire, two others were hurt in the ensuing chaos at the mall.

A year prior, in December 2016, two fights closed the Wolfchase Galleria and Oak Court Mall. There was another fight at Wolfchase in 2014.

“Something has to change,” said Clemmye Trueheart, 49. “You can’t even go to the mall.”

Trueheart’s plans to go into the mall were crushed when she arrived and saw it swarmed with officers. She describes today’s gun violence as “too much.”

“I’m a product - a child of the projects - when I was growing up," Trueheart said, "and I’ve never seen it this bad.”

“Gun violence in Memphis got to stop,” Trueheart said. “I don’t know what they can do to stop these guns, these kids, these gangs. They got to do something.”

This is an updating story.