Additional charges have been filed against a St. Paul man accused of killing another man and injuring his wife in a shooting in St. Paul’s Highland Park neighborhood last November.

Darwin Anderson, 26, previously had been charged on one count of intentional second-degree murder.

But an indictment unsealed earlier this week in Ramsey County District Court now charges Anderson with one count of first-degree premeditated murder as well as a count of second-degree attempted murder. Anderson also was charged with two additional counts of first-degree murder.

Anderson followed 32-year-old David Lee and his 33-year-old wife from Broadway Pub & Grille in Minneapolis early Nov. 1 to St. Paul’s Highland Park neighborhood, where Lee stopped to drop off his cousin, according to the charges say.

After the cousin exited the vehicle, bullets were fired into the couple’s vehicle, Lee’s wife reportedly later told police. Four of them struck Lee, killing him.

Lee’s wife was hit in the thigh and taken to Regions Hospital and later released.

She called 911 about 2:15 a.m. on Nov. 1 to report the shooting at the 1700 block of Graham Avenue, near Davern and West Seventh streets.

Police arrived to find her screaming and hugging Lee, who was slumped over in the driver’s seat of their GMC Yukon.

She told officers that she ducked down and put her hands on the gas and brake pedals to get the vehicle moving after the shoots started.

Anderson was arrested after police reviewed surveillance footage from the bar that appeared to show him watching Lee in the hours before the shooting, according to the charges.

He also reportedly told several people at the bar he was “beefing” with Lee, of Oakdale, and “was going to get him.”

Shortly after Lee and his wife left, footage shows Anderson leaving behind them. CCTV cameras then showed Lee driving from the bar to an apartment complex in St. Paul, with Anderson’s vehicle behind him, according to the charges.

Anderson’s vehicle was reportedly then seen driving away from the area shortly after the shooting.

Cell records also place Anderson’s phone in the area at the time of the homicide, according to the charges.

After the shooting, Anderson reportedly told several people that he had been involved “in a shootout and that someone got hit.”

Anderson, who was arrested Jan. 1, told police he was at the bar in question drinking heavily the night of the homicide, but denied any involvement in it, according to the charges.

He pleaded not guilty to the second-degree murder charge last month.

An omnibus hearing is scheduled for April, where he will have an opportunity to enter pleas to the new charges.

His attorney, Jeremy Plesha, said Anderson was expecting the elevated charges based on the prosecution’s earlier allegations, adding that Anderson would be entering not guilty to all counts at the April hearing.