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I'm reading the third Cormoran Strike novel at the moment (J K Rowling, aka Robert Galbraith) and there are several chapters written from the killer's POV in third person. Nowhere is he identified, except for his gender. I recommend taking a look at it if you can.

I have often found that the best way to hide a character's identity is to change the POV. I feel that by doing this, I'm not only able to conceal the character's identity, but also add some mystery to the scene.
Something like:
"The constable saw the grin on her attackers face. He seemed to be laughing at the fact that she was trying to arrest him before he started strangling her."
Further, using Alexis' suggestion, you can switch the POV to the other character entering the room.
Obviously this only works if you want to change the POV. Hope this helped.
Jane's suggestion of calling him "The Killer" is good.
I agree with M.J., too. In both my published novel and the one I'm currently working on, there's a lot that needs to be kept a secret for some time. I found it tough to do that until I changed the point of view from an omniscient third to first. Play with it a bit.
I agree with M.J., too. In both my published novel and the one I'm currently working on, there's a lot that needs to be kept a secret for some time. I found it tough to do that until I changed the point of view from an omniscient third to first. Play with it a bit.




Now that it's been m..."
Don't worry about that. We all learn along the way. That's how we grow and get better! :)

I can't even remember which book this was from - possibly Little Dorrit, but I could be wrong - but it worked really well.
So maybe try using a descriptive cue like that to identify him. I also agree with those posters above who suggested you switch POV so that someone else is observing him/describing him to us and that person doesn't necessarily know his identity yet so it wouldn't feel weird to say things like "the figure" or "the man".
Good luck!

You wrote:
1. "trying to arrest him" / "It wasn’t as funny when the words were repeated in the room behind him."
And then
2. "The move caught the officer, the figure was sure the shape was a police officer rather than one of the hospital’s security guards,"
My thoughts: A police officer would usually identity himself as such when arresting someone, "This is the police, move away and put your hands on your back" (or something along that trend) which means the figure would have known it was a police officer without having to pay any attention to shapes etc. The officer told him already.