Roger S HoffmanFor more than a decade, Roger S. Hoffman lived undercover, operating in the shadows as adeep-cover informant for the federal government. He carried no badge, claimed noprotection, and survived by trusting no one.Embedded in criminal worlds where expoure meant death, Hoffman balanced loyalty andbetrayal, truth and fabrication. Every relationship was a calculated risk. Every day could behis lastAlong the way, he formed a life-changing friendship with Special Agent Don Sherman.Years later, WFAA.com the ABC affiliate in Dallas would capture the essence of that bondwith a headline that said it best: "Former Dallas FBI corruption agent sidelined by stroke now relies on unlikelyfriendship."The quote from the broadcast: "But it was in his darkest days after he got sick that Sherman would find out who his realfriends were. The taciturn, just-the-facts G-man who rarely showed emotion found himselfdependent on others. Some friends disappeared, he said. But one friend remainedsteadfast and never wavered. His name is Roger Hoffman, a friend he met in the unlikeliestof circumstances. It was not a pleasant acquaintance for Hoffman in the beginning."Door Number Three is an honest, heartfelt, and deeply human portrayal of the remarkablefriendship-yes, brotherhood-that grew between two men who once stood on oppositesides of the law.Roger has lived in the Dallas, Texas, area for more than 50 years and is the father of onechild. Read More Read Less
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