Tri-Town News - Howell, NJ USA
September 28, 2006
By Dave Benjamin - Staff Writer
Ghost Hunter Comes To Town
JACKSON - If you're looking for a ghost in the Jackson Library, Oct 5 at 7 p.m. may be the
time to find out how to track one down.
At that time L'Aura L. Hladik, founder and director of the New Jersey Ghost Hunters
Society, will speak about "Paranormal Investigation."
Librarian Jo Anne Morales said Hladik's interest in the paranormal goes back to her
childhood with her own experiences living in a haunted house.
Topics to be covered in Hladik's talk include what are ghosts, why there are ghosts and
how does one investigate the paranormal. Those who attend may be able to see ghost
pictures and hear ghost voices. They may also learn about haunted sites in New Jersey.
Hladik has been ghost hunting since 1993.
In 1998 she founded the New Jersey Ghost Hunters Society, which now has more than 380
members statewide. Paranormal investigative professionals are dedicated to research and
documen-tation of paranormal events and hauntings.
In addition to hunting ghosts in New Jersey, Hladik has also hunted for ghosts in
Savannah, Ga,, St. Francisville, La., at the Myrtles plantation, New Orleans, Beardsley
Castle in St. Johnsville, N.Y., Gettysburg, Pa., Bachelor's Grove and Resurrection
Cemetery in Chicago, and Nashville, Memphis and Chattanooga, Tenn.
Hladik's interest in the paranormal began in childhood when her dad introduced her to the
television show "The Twilight Zone" and she later finished eighth grade while
living in a haunted house.
According to her Internet Web site, Hladik remembers the terror of running through
Phoebe's bedroom, then a private dining room of the Wedgewood Inn, today known as Jimmy's
Haunt in Morristown.
She is working on a book of her favorite investigations and currently has two
investigations published in the "Encyclopedia of Haunted Places" by Jeff
Belanger. Hladik has written articles about Ringwood Manor and the Antoine LeBlanc murders
for New Jersey History's Mysteries.
Coincidently, her great-grandmother owned one of the wallets made from Antoine LeBlanc's
skin.
To register for the Oct. 5 program call the Jackson Library at (732) 928-4400.