LONG BEACH >> Long Beach police have identified the body of an infant girl found Sunday afternoon in a San Diego County trash bin as 3-week-old Eliza Delacruz who was abducted after a shooting that left her mother, father and uncle wounded in North Long Beach on Saturday evening.

Delacruz was found after San Diego County Sheriff’s deputies received a radio call around 1:25 p.m. about a deceased baby in a trash bin in an alleyway in the 600 block of Palm Avenue in Imperial Beach, according to information provided by the sheriff’s department.

The department alerted Long Beach police about their investigation around 4:30 p.m. on Sunday, said Marlene Arrona, a police spokeswoman.

No information was available Sunday night about whether a suspect police are looking for has been found or been arrested and no one has come forward with information about the shooting.

Investigators believe that the shooting and the abduction were not random acts, Long Beach police homicide Lt. Lloyd Cox said. Authorities have not yet determined why the family was targeted.

Authorities urge anyone with information to call Long Beach Homicide Detectives Donald Goodman and Mark Mattia at 562-570-7244. Anyone wishing to remain anonymous may call 1-800-222-TIPS (8477), or text TIPLA plus your tip to 274637 (CRIMES), or visit www.LACrimeStoppers.org.

The infant went missing following the shooting in the 100 block of W. 51st Street on Saturday, said Arrona.

“We’ve been working the case all night long and are continuing to work (it),” Cox said Sunday afternoon. “Right now, all we have for a description is a male, Hispanic or African-American who fled the location with the child.”

An Amber Alert was not issued because there was not enough information available for such an alert, he said.

“We believe that this is not a random act,” Cox said. “We are going through the backgrounds of all the individuals who live here, but it appears to be very personal.”

The baby girl’s mother and father remain hospitalized in “serious or critical condition,” he said. Her uncle has since been released.

Several shots were fired in rooms inside the home, and both parents were shot in the upper body, Cox said.

There are no signs of forced entry and nothing appears to have been stolen, he said.

Family members, and neighbors or friends of the family were present at the home Sunday morning but declined to comment.

Detectives arrived at the scene, spoke to people inside the home and canvassed the neighborhood before leaving late Sunday morning.

Police were first called to the home about 5:50 p.m. Saturday, Arrona said.

Evelyn Eves, who has lived in the neighborhood since 1995, said “I was shocked (by the shooting). They were a quiet family and this is a quiet street.”

She said extended family lives at the home but she has never met the father, mother or baby.

“I didn’t hear any shots,” Eves said and added that she was not aware of the shooting until police officers knocked on her door Saturday night.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Contact Greg Yee at 562-499-1476.