LOWELL — Kristen D’Eon and Rob Logan Jr. were at an appointment for their 3-week-old daughter at Lowell General Hospital on Friday when they realized that their only vehicle, a silver Buick LeSabre, was stolen out of a parking garage.

The next time they saw the Buick, its front seat and steering wheel were covered in the blood of a 27-year-old Tyngsboro man who was shot by police following a pursuit in the family’s car.

“We were both very shocked and at a loss for words,” said D’Eon, 22, of Fitchburg, about getting the news of what happened to their car early Sunday morning.

Michael Clark, of Tyngsboro, was recovering from his wounds at Boston Medical Center on Monday as prosecutors released his identity and the charges he will face, which include counts of receiving a stolen motor vehicle and receiving stolen property over $250.

Those counts were filed in connection with allegations that Clark drove D’Eon and Logan’s stolen LeSabre to Nashua on Friday night, and then used Logan’s credit card, which was in the LeSabre’s console, to make several fraudulent purchases.

On Saturday, Clark was still driving the LeSabre when he allegedly fled from an attempted traffic stop in Tyngsboro, led police on a pursuit into Chelmsford and then dragged a Chelmsford police sergeant with the door of the LeSabre in the parking lot of Sully’s Ice Cream Stand on Graniteville Road, according to prosecutors.

Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan said a Tyngsboro police officer saw his colleague from Chelmsford being dragged through the parking lot and shot Clark twice.

Logan, 25, said he went out to where he parked the car on the first floor of the parking garage at LGH on Friday about 7 p.m., and initially thought he must have forgotten where he parked.

It was then that his credit-card company called him and reported his card appeared to have been used fraudulently at Best Buy in Nashua, Logan said.

Logan said he had left his wallet in the console of the car and that his card was used to rack up about $400 worth of fraudulent charges.

Logan reported the LeSabre stolen Friday about 7:51 p.m., and didn’t hear more about it until Saturday about 1:30 a.m., when he got a call from police saying the LeSabre had been recovered after it was involved in the police pursuit.

A state trooper and a Chelmsford police officer then met with the family Sunday about 3 a.m. and filled them in on details, D’Eon said.

The family is now without a vehicle, but family members have been helping them get around, D’Eon said.

“It’s really difficult,” she said of not having a car.

When Logan went to pick up the vehicle Sunday, its front seats and steering wheel were covered in blood, as was the center console, D’Eon said.

“They were going to cover (the blood) so he could drive it, but he asked them to hold it and call a biohazard place to clean it,” D’Eon said of Logan.

D’Eon said the family is now waiting to hear whether its worth it to have the car cleaned or better to simply have it declared totaled by their insurance company.

On the bright side, Logan said his credit-card company wrote off the roughly $400 worth of fraudulent charges.

Follow Robert Mills on Twitter and Tout @Robert_Mills.