This is the moment murderer Tom Carney was found cowering in a garden shortly after he brutally attacked pensioner David Phllips.
Carney, a former Ospreys rugby academy prospect, was found cowering near the murder scene shortly after he had killed the 76-year-old.
The first officer to deal with him, South Wales Police PC Donald Beare, told the murder trial Carney looked “very frightened” and “looked in shock”, Wales Online reports.
Carney at first gave a false name to police – claiming to be called Jeremy – and told officers someone had tried to rape him.
After it was confirmed Mr Phillips had died of his injuries the defendant was arrested and transported to Swansea Central police station, Carney became violent.

The 29-year-old refused to leave the police van until he had been given a cigarette then launched a disgusting rant directed at officers threatening to “smack” them and “f***ing strangle you to death”.
He then said: “I got f***ing raped earlier and you are fing standing up for him”, adding: “He was trying to rape me” and “I am straight as f***”.
He screamed at officers: “I stamped on his head!”

Once inside the station Carney urinated in a holding cell before spitting in the face of an officer – that assault was the start of a violent struggle which saw the alarm sounded in the custody suite and more officers rushing to help. Several officers sustained injury in the incident, police say.
Later that night, while being held in the cells, Carney refused to allow plastic bags to be placed over his hands to preserve forensic evidence – saying they would stop him from masturbating.
He repeated his claims that Mr Philips had tried to rape him, and subjected officers to a volley of abuse, and demanded food and a hot chocolate.
Footage from a local supermarket also captured Mr Philips out shopping for booze earlier that day, the last time he was seen alive.
Carney claimed Mr Phillips was his sponsor at Alcoholics Anonymous and had offered to help him after a relapse.

He said Mr Phillips "abused his trust" by drugging and raping him.
Mr Phillips suffered a fracture to the spine, 27 rib fractures and bruising to the genitals and pelvis area from the savage attack.
Carney, of Morriston, Swansea, pleaded guilty to manslaughter on the grounds of diminished responsibility.
But a jury rejected this and convicted him of murder.
Judge Paul Thomas QC jailed Carney for life with a minimum of 15 years and ten days.
Prosecutor Patrick Harrington QC said: Tomas Carney deliberately inflicted the most vicious, sustained, and brutal attack on his victim, and by so doing - in a controlled manner and fuelled by anger - chose to end another person's life."