Lane tells the story of Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig. Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com: accessed ), memorial page for Roger Dean Craig (12 May 1936–15 May 1975), Find a Grave Memorial no.
In 1976, along with co-author Larry Ray Harris (1952-1996) published Cover-Up: The Governmental Conspiracy to Conceal the Facts About the Public Execution of John Kennedy . Roger Craig represents one of the many intriguing aspects of the Kennedy assassination.A Dallas sheriff's deputy, who made deputy of the year in 1960, he always kept insisting that he and his fellow officers had found a Mauser rifle on the 6th floor of the Texas School Book Depository. His decision to "end it all" was a tragedy, but one entirely unconnected with the tragedy in Dealey Plaza. Dallas witnesses. Roger Craig's 1971 manuscript When They Kill a President is now available in paperback for the first time. Survived multiple murder attempts including car bomb, and being forced off a cliff by another car. Somebody actually did own a Nash Rambler station wagon linked to the JFK assassination, and that person was Clay Shaw. Clay Shaw is the only individual ever prosecuted for conspiracy to assassinate JFK. Roger Craig wasn’t the only one who saw the station wagon leave Dealey Plaza, or the people getting into it. 1.6K likes. Tag Archives: roger craig David Sanchez Morales: the CIA’s thug of many faces & link between the JFK & RFK assassinations June 18, 2013 by crappygovernment tagged arnold rowland , billy seymour , cia , david atlee phillips , david sanchez morales , doublecross , handlers , impostor oswald , J.D. Craig was on duty on November 22nd, and made crucial observations. Some of these are Dallas County Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig, Richard Carr, and Gerry Hemming. Hubert’s book, Betrayal: A JFK Honor Guard Speaks gives us a first-hand account of the secrets surrounding the mutilation of JFK’s body to make Lee Harvey Oswald take the blame. Many other witnesses also said the vehicle was a “Rambler”. He reported what he saw but much of his report was not in line with the official story released by the Dallas police. November 6, 1987 | Clip Of News, Politics, and Ethics This clip, title, and description were not created by C-SPAN. In … Wilma Bond Richard Randolph Carr Roger Craig Pierre Finck Buell Wesley Frazier Robert Frazier Billy Joe Martin Mary Moorman 1960, Roger Craig receives Deputy Sheriff of The Year award in Dallas. Written from the perspective of former Dallas Deputy Sheriff, Roger Dean Craig, "When They Kill A President" documents his eyewitness account of the assassination of John F. Kennedy, his investigation at the crime scene in Dealey Plaza, and the cover up and aftermath that followed. Here is testimony from the historic Shaw trial, along with other resources. Deputy Sheriff Roger Craig was on the scene of the JFK assassination as it happened and was part of the active investigation that followed. Roger Craig witnessed activities that took place in and near Dealey Plaza on the day that JFK was killed. Roger Craig was a Dallas deputy sheriff on November 22, 1963 who heard the shots that killed the president. He identified Oswald hurriedly getting into a Rambler and leaving Dealy Plaza then identified the rifle found on the 6th floor of the Texas Book Depository as a Mauser rather than a Carcano.
Craig then became a problem. He lost his job and several attempts were made on his life over a period of years. ROGER CRAIG, JR. Roger is the son of the courageous and honorable Dallas Sheriff Deputy, Roger Craig, who courageously [and truthfully, in our opinion] Learn the shocking truth behind the assassination of JFK. Officer Roger Craig Dallas County Sheriff Deputy Sheriff Office 1960 "Man of the Year" Helped Jim Garrison with investigations When They Kill A President: Fired when he spoke out. His policeman instincts immediately went in high gears. Roger Craig was an unfortunate man in many ways, and he contributed to his own misfortune by telling a variety of "interesting" stories about what he had seen in the wake of the assassination — stories that undermined his credibility as a law enforcement officer. He tried the best he could to identify the source of the shots to possibly make an arrest.