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David Hendricks authors somebody else’s story while reconciling his

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(MCT) CHICAGO — With all the turbulence David Hendricks has endured in his life, it may come as no surprise that he has written a book.

A Chicago-area native, millionaire businessman and fundamentalist Christian, Hendricks was convicted nearly 30 years ago in one of the Illinois’ most notorious crimes — the knife and ax murders of his three children and wife in their spacious, new Bloomington home. He spent seven years in prison before an unexpected court review of the case led to a new trial and his acquittal.

After building and selling two lucrative businesses, Hendricks is on his fourth marriage. He’s lost his religion but found a quiet, comfortable life in a gated community in Florida, where he enjoys a pool in the backyard and a golf course view. Until a short time ago, Hendricks, 58, buzzed around the country piloting his private plane.

But he hasn’t written a book about his tumultuous life. He’s written a book, to be released in paperback, about the life of a largely forgotten murderer who makes greeting cards from a cell in Menard Correctional Center.

It is the latest turn in an odyssey Hendricks is still trying to reconcile. As he briefly resurfaces in public view, the book also serves as a reminder of a heinous crime, his unsettled place in it and how a life once in ruins rebuilds itself unevenly.

“As a person, I think I’m pretty much what I was before, again,” Hendricks said by phone recently. “There was about a decade when I wasn’t like me.”

That decade started on the night of Nov. 7, 1983, when Susan Hendricks, 30, and the couple’s three children — Rebekah, 9; Grace, 7; and Benjamin, 5 — were savagely attacked and killed in their beds. Hendricks, who possessed a 130 IQ and ran a successful back-brace business, told authorities he had embarked on a work-related trip that evening.

But authorities pegged him as a prime suspect early and charged him with the murders Dec. 5.

Almost a year later, a jury convicted him, based largely on analyses of the stomach contents of the children that indicated they were killed before Hendricks left on his business trip. Prosecutors also emphasized Hendricks’ intimate conduct with women who modeled back braces he designed as evidence that he felt trapped and was desperate to escape his fundamentalist Christian lifestyle.

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