Two more criminal homicides rounded out a violent weekend in Dallas, bringing the death toll to four by Monday morning.

Officers with the Dallas Police Department received a call about a shooting around 9 p.m. Sunday night in the 9800 block of Bruton Road, which comprises the border between Council Member Jaime Resendez’s District 5 and Council Member Adam Bazaldua’s District 7.

Police discovered a 44-year-old man identified as Keeman Bowens injured from at least one apparent gunshot wound. First responders with Dallas-Fire Rescue were dispatched but Bowens died from his injuries at the scene.

Iyanna Wells, 25, was arrested by police and charged with murder. The investigation is ongoing, DPD said.

Officers got another shooting call a few hours later at around 1 a.m. The incident occurred in the 2000 block of Lanark Avenue in Council Member Carolyn King Arnold’s District 4.

“The preliminary investigation determined when officers arrived, they found the female victim shot. Dallas Fire-Rescue responded, and the victim died at the scene,” DPD wrote on its crime blog.

Police identified Deiontay Horn, 21, and Keiona Hargis, 26, as suspects. Both individuals were arrested and charged with murder.

Both murders came on the heels of two other criminal homicides — one on Saturday night and another in the early morning hours of Sunday, as previously reported by The Dallas Express. The murders were logged in Council Member Jesse Moreno’s District 2 and Council Member Zarin Gracey’s District 3.

There have been 119 murders logged in Dallas proper this year as of July 21, according to the City’s crime analytics dashboard. The overnight murder in the early morning hours of Monda likely puts the current number at 120.

DPD has been short-staffed for years, which has hampered its effectiveness in fighting crime.

Only around 3,000 officers are currently in the field, despite a prior City analysis advising that a force of roughly 4,000 is needed to police a jurisdiction the size of Dallas properly.

Meanwhile, the Dallas City Council approved a budget for DPD of only $654 million this fiscal year, which is considerably less taxpayer money allocated towards public safety than in other high-crime cities, such as Chicago, Los Angeles, and New York City.