This story was last updated on: 8:12 a.m., Friday, Jan. 20, 2017.

Wearing a medical pad over his left eye and in between expletiive-filled rants, Markeith Loyd told a judge Thursday morning that he didn't resist arrest and wants to represent himself in court.

The 41-year-old Loyd refused an offer of a public defender during his first court appearance since his arrest Tuesday night.

"I’m going to defend myself," Loyd told the judge.

He also denied killing his pregnant ex-girlfriend, Sade Dixon, in December.

"You all portray this s--- to the news people ... If I just went there and shot this girl, when there were other guns found on the scene. The gun was pulled on me," Loyd said. "You’re all acting like I just went over there and shot her. Her little brother got dropped off. While me and her were standing there just talking, all kind of other s--- happened that happened before. You just put on the news, 'Oh, I just went there, shot this girl, got my family endangered.' So no, I wouldn’t have come there right there.”

The judge said there would be no bond for Loyd and told him he is to have no contact with the Dixon family, at which point he cursed at the judge.

Loyd also led law enforcement officers on a nine-day manhunt after the Jan. 9 slaying of Police Lt. Debra Clayton. Acting on a tip from a person who came to her about Loyd, she spotted Loyd at an Orlando Wal-Mart, where she was shot dead.

During an interview with CNN on Wednesday night, Mina disclosed for the first time that surveillance video from the shopping center shows Loyd allegedly killing Clayton execution-style.

“The first shot he fired was not the fatal shot. It sent her to the ground," Mina told HLN's Ashleigh Banfield. "But instead of getting away, he came over to her, stood over her and shot her multiple times with the fatal shot that killed her,” Mina said. “So we know Markeith Loyd is the scum of the earth and a cold-blooded killer.”

In addition, Loyd told the judge that his family and friends did not help him evade police.

"You're locking up my family," Loyd told the judge, referring to his 27-year-old niece, Lakensha Smith-Loyd. She was arrested on charges she helped the accused cop-killer by picking up money for him. Smith-Loyd was granted $750,000 bond.

“I’m not finish talking, because you’ve all been making up s--- the whole time, and then you make stuff up about my family, locked them up," Loyd said. "I work, I work, I work two, three jobs. I work, and I work for that family. That’s why he gave that money to my daughter and he gave my niece the other half because he didn’t give my daughter all of it. That money was not for me,” Loyd said.

“I received nothing for nobody. I was out there by myself. How in the hell anybody doing anything? I went to Wal-mart myself to buy food. Wasn't nobody doing nothing for me," Loyd said.

After his Tuesday arrest, Loyd was taken from Orlando Regional Medical Center, where he received more than 20 hours of treatment for injuries he sustained during his arrest.

“They done took my eye, they done broke my nose, broke my jaw, they did all this s---, said I resisted, but I crawled out to the mother-f------ , so how did I resist? I didn’t resist s---, they just did this s---. They are trying hide it from the news people, but I’m here right now.”

Mina has said officers had to use force to get him into Clayton's handcuffs.

Loyd, in a first appearance that usually takes a minute or so, had a final message for the judge: "F--- you. Have him sign the no contact. F--- you.”

Loyd’s family, who attended the hearing, had no comment as they left the jail.

But Dixon’s mother, who also attended the hearing, was confident justice would be done.

“I could not believe what I saw in the courtroom," Stephanie-Dixon-Daniels said. "It just shows his ignorance, but justice is going to prevail … So he can be put under the jail.”

On Thursday evening, additional charges were filed against Loyd for the death of Clayton: First-degree murder of a law enforcement officer, attempted first-degree murder with a firearm of a law enforcement officer, carjacking with a firearm, aggravated assault with intent to commit a felony and wearing a bulletproof vest.

Loyd is expected to make another court appearance on Friday for the new charges.

