🚨 JUST IN: Charles Victor Thompson Executed January 28, 2026 – Inside His Final Meal, Haunting Last Words, and Death Row Secrets Revealed! 😱⚖️💔
After nearly 27 years on de@th row, the 55-year-old Texas man convicted of the 1998 double murder of his ex-girlfriend Glenda Dennise Hayslip and her boyfriend Darren Keith Cain was put to de@th by lethal injection in Huntsville – the first U.S. execution of 2026.
His last meal was simple: two cheeseburgers, fries, and a Dr. Pepper – a quiet contrast to the rage that once consumed him. In his final moments, Thompson faced the victims’ families and spoke words that echoed through the chamber: “I’m sorry for what I did… I want to tell all of y’all, I love you and that keep Jesus in your life, keep Jesus first.” He asked for forgiveness, hoping they could heal and move past the trauma that “creates more victims 28 years later.”
Behind the scenes on de@th row: secrets of his time in isolation, escape attempts that made headlines, and the long wait that ended in the chamber. This execution closes a brutal chapter – but the pain lingers for the families.
Read the full inside story: Charles Victor Thompson’s execution – final meal, last words, de@th row secrets here:

Charles Victor Thompson, 55, was executed by lethal injection on January 28, 2026, at the Huntsville Unit, becoming the first person put to death in the United States this year. Thompson had spent nearly 27 years on death row after being convicted of the April 1998 murders of his ex-girlfriend Glenda Dennise Hayslip, 39, and her new boyfriend Darren Keith Cain, 30, in Tomball, a Houston suburb.
Thompson was pronounced dead at 6:50 p.m. CST, about 20 minutes after the lethal injection began. He gasped loudly as the process started, then took a dozen breaths that transitioned into snoring sounds before his heart stopped, according to witnesses and media reports from the scene.
His last meal, requested and served on the day of execution, consisted of two cheeseburgers, french fries, and a Dr. Pepper – a straightforward choice typical of many Texas death row inmates in their final hours.
In his final statement, delivered through the chamber’s microphone to witnesses including relatives of the victims, Thompson expressed remorse and sought forgiveness: “Yes, I would like to say that I hope the victim’s family, their extended family, and their loved ones can find forgiveness in their heart and that you can begin to heal and move past this. There is no winners in this situation, it creates more victims and traumatizes more people 28 years later. I’m sorry for what I did. I’m sorry for what happened, and I want to tell all of y’all, I love you and that keep Jesus in your life, keep Jesus first.”
The execution followed the denial of last-minute appeals. On January 27, the Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles voted against clemency. Thompson petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for a stay, arguing he was denied his Sixth Amendment right to confront the medical examiner who performed Hayslip’s autopsy. The Court rejected both the stay and certiorari petition hours before the scheduled time.
Thompson was convicted in April 1999 of capital murder for the shootings. On April 29, 1998, police responded to a disturbance at Hayslip’s apartment and escorted Thompson away. The next morning, he returned, kicked down the door, and shot Hayslip and Cain multiple times. He fled but was arrested shortly after.
His death sentence was overturned on appeal, leading to a retrial in 2005 where a jury again imposed death. Notably, Thompson escaped from the Harris County Jail during the retrial process in 1998, remaining at large for three days before recapture while intoxicated.
On death row at the Polunsky Unit (later transferred for execution), Thompson spent decades in restrictive conditions typical of Texas capital cases: single cells, limited contact, and heightened security due to his escape history. He filed grievances over time, though specific “death row secrets” beyond standard isolation protocols were not detailed in public records.
The Harris County District Attorney’s Office, under Sean Teare (who took office in 2025), described the execution as closing a long chapter. “After nearly 30 years, this brings some measure of closure for the families,” a spokesperson said. Relatives of Hayslip and Cain attended the execution, with some expressing relief that justice was served.
Texas has led the nation in executions historically, though Florida had the most in 2025 with 19. Thompson’s case marked the first of 2026, with three more scheduled through May, all involving Black defendants from the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
The execution drew attention to ongoing debates over capital punishment, including appeals delays, the role of victim impact, and the psychological toll of long-term death row confinement. Thompson’s final words emphasized forgiveness and healing, contrasting the violence of his crimes.
For the victims’ families, the day brought mixed emotions – closure after decades of waiting, but no erasure of the loss. Hayslip’s family remembered her as a devoted mother; Cain’s as a hardworking man caught in tragedy.
As Texas continues its use of lethal injection, Thompson’s case serves as a reminder of the gravity and finality of capital punishment. The state maintains executions provide justice for heinous crimes, while opponents highlight moral and procedural concerns.
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