
THIS is the moment a murderer calmly asks “Can I put my shoes on?” as he’s arrested on his doorstep.
Footage shows David Hill, 57, being questioned by cops after violently attacking his pensioner neighbour in his Huddersfield home.
The entitled thug turns to officers as they try to handcuff him and says: “Can I just put my shoes on?”
Hill brutally assaulted his neighbour, 77-year-old Kurt Giwisser, on February 21, 2023.
The killer punched the pensioner in the face and forced his way into the property before launching a further attack.
Paramedics rushed Mr Giwisser to hospital after he was able to call 999.
Hill was arrested shortly after the incident and released on bail as the investigation continued.
Mr Giwisser was discharged after the horror, but in the following weeks his health deteriorated.
He sadly passed away in April of that year, and medical experts concluded there was a link between the attack and his death.
Hill was later charged and convicted of murdering Mr Giwisser.
He is set to be sentenced on December 18 after being found guilty by a jury following a trial at Leeds Crown Court which started in November.
In a tribute, Mr Giwisser’s heartbroken family, said: “Kurt was a gentle, caring and proud man. He was always immaculate in how he dressed and how he carried himself.
“He loved his guitar and the sound of him playing brought warmth and comfort into our home.
“People loved him because he was easy to talk to, warm-hearted and genuine.
“One of his favourite simple pleasures was going for a drink in the coffee shop.
“It was part of his routine, somewhere he could relax, chat and feel part of the community.
“Even there, people miss him. His absence is felt everywhere he used to go.
“His grandchildren and great grandchildren adored him, and he adored them right back. They should have had so many more laughs, so many stories, so much more time.
“That is a loss that stretches across generations.
“Since the day he was taken from us, our lives have been filled with grief, fear, and emptiness.
“Family gatherings feel incomplete. There is an empty space where he should be.
“A silence where his laughter and music should fill the room. Even moments of happiness feel overshadowed by the fact he is not here to share them with us.
“What happened didn’t only end his life, it shattered ours.
“The trauma of having to decide to end life support, the cruelty of the violence he suffered, and the lifelong grief we must now live with, has changed us forever.
“There’s no going back to the people we were before.”
Detective Inspector Suzanne Hall of the Homicide and Major Enquiry Team, who led the investigation, said: “Kurt Giwisser was fit, healthy, and very much enjoying life until all that was taken away in a brutal attack by the violent bully who he was unlucky enough to have as his neighbour.
“It is hard to comprehend how anyone could act so violently towards a man in his late 70s, and especially over what seems to have been a fairly trivial issue.
“We now await Hill’s sentencing for his crimes and hope the jury’s verdict today will bring some comfort to all of Kurt’s family and friends.”











