Toronto Police say they have identified the victim and two suspects in an early-Wednesday stabbing in Scarborough that left a man dead.

Det. Dennis Ecklund of the homicide squad said at a Thursday news conference that police have issued Canada-wide search warrants for Anthony Wong, 29, and Sharmake Abdi, 26, on charges of first-degree murder.

He urged them to contact lawyers and turn themselves in to police.

Members of the public should consider them as armed and dangerous and not approach them, Ecklund said.

Wong, a Brampton resident who goes by the nickname of "King," is black, 6'3", 150 lbs. and has a shaved head. Abdi, also known as "Tall Man-Slim," is 6'5" and has short, black, curly hair.

No allegations against the two men have been proven in a court of law.

The incident occurred at about 4:30 a.m. Wednesday in a residential area on Magnolia Avenue, which is slightly west of Midland Avenue and Danforth Road.

Ecklund said it appears a small dispute escalated to the point where victim David Darcy, 37, was stabbed by one of his alleged assailants.

Darcy attempted to drive himself to hospital. He got to a Shell station across from Scarborough General Hospital at Lawrence Avenue East and McCowan Road before he fell out of his vehicle and collapsed onto the ground.

Bystanders called 911. Toronto EMS transported Darcy to Sunnybrook hospital, but doctors there pronounced him dead, Ecklund said.

Darcy is Toronto's 29th homicide victim of 2010.

An autopsy performed Thursday found Darcy died of a single stab wound to the chest and abdomen.

A murder weapon has not been found yet. "From the results of the autopsy, I can tell you it is a fairly large knife," Ecklund said.

The detective said they are attempting to determine the relationship between Darcy and the two men suspected in his death. But police do not believe this to be a completely random incident.

"We're not speculating to motive at this time," he said, adding they don't know why Darcy would have been in that area.

Abdi did live in the area, he said.

Police want anyone who can help them track Darcy's movements before the attack to contact them, Ecklund said.

Darcy was unemployed at the time of his death. He was something of a "jack of all trades" who did odd jobs for family and friends, he said.