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Deputy Sheriff Roger Dean Craig was on-duty in Dallas November 22, 1963 during the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, and was ordered by Dallas Sheriff Bill Decker to stand in front of the Sheriff's office on Main Street (at the corner of Houston) and to "take no part whatsoever in the security of [JFK's] motorcade." Little did Craig know, he was about to embark on a path that would forever change his life, as well as the entire political landscape of the United States of America. Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig never changed his account of what he witnessed and experienced on Friday, November 22, 1963. The fact that his testimony was drastically changed by the Warren Commission to fit their official report concerning Kennedy's assassination is highly illuminating, and provides us with a glimpse of just how disingenuous they truly were when interviewing, and later altering eyewitness accounts of what actually happened. He was later fired from the Sheriff's office on July 4, 1967, and from that day forward he never again could find steady employment. Multiple attempts were made on his life, and in the end, he was alleged to have shot himself to death on May 15, 1975.