EDITOR’S NOTE: This story has been updated to correct the victim’s age. Longmont police initially provided an incorrect age.

Longmont police spent Sunday searching for the suspect wanted on suspicion of murder following a shooting just before 3 a.m. in a Walmart parking lot that left a 33-year-old man dead.

Police obtained a warrant for the arrest of Joseph Keith Anderson, 34, on charges of second-degree murder and possession of a weapon by a previous offender.

Anyone who sees Anderson, who has ties to the Loveland and Littleton areas, is asked to call 911 immediately.

He was last seen driving a black Nissan Murano, which police said was found around 3:45 p.m. Sunday near 120th Avenue and Sheridan Boulevard in Westminster. The person who recognized the car reported it to police, who took the car back to Longmont.

Police were first dispatched to the north parking lot of the Walmart at 2285 E. Ken Pratt Blvd. at 2:57 a.m. Sunday on a report of a possible shooting.

They found that a witness had transported the victim to Longmont United Hospital, where he died of his injuries.

The name of the victim, who is from Longmont, will be released by the Weld County Coroner’s Office pending notification of next of kin.

Later Sunday morning, Mike Doody said he’d been asleep in his RV in the Walmart parking lot when he heard what he thought were three gunshots.

“I heard some yelling, too,” he said. “But I didn’t think anything of it.”

By mid-morning, Longmont police, members of the Longmont Emergency Unit and evidence technicians could be seen working the crime scene in the parking lot of the Walmart, which remained open.

Police taped off an area in the north end of the lot about the size of two Olympic-sized swimming pools. There was a white minivan stopped at a 45-degree angle against a parking abutment inside the taped-off area.

There appeared to be at least eight yellow evidence markers on the pavement around the van. Investigators were seen using metal detectors to search the area.

Sunday’s shooting death, should it be ruled a homicide, would be Longmont’s first of 2017.

There have been seven homicides in Boulder County so far this year, though Sunday’s death would not be added to that tally as the shooting occurred in Weld County.