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Author William J. Hall Takes Us Inside ‘The World’s Most Haunted House’

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For author William J. Hall, the road to writing The World’s Most Haunted House: The True Story of the Bridgeport Poltergeist on Lindley Street was almost as interesting as the case itself, and he filled us in on that journey along with information about the famed haunting in a recent interview.

Hall has been a magician since he was seven years old, though he’s quick to point out that he wasn’t a very good magician at that age. A lifelong fan of Houdini, it was perhaps his knowledge of the famed escape artist’s interest in the occult and the paranormal that ultimately fueled his own.

“Houdini devoted almost 30 years of his life to the study of what we could today call the paranormal,” Hall explains. “He was a victim of his time, however; spiritualism was what was going on then, and so much of that was faked.”

Spiritualism, a movement that was popular in the early 20th Century, celebrated the existence of spirits and ghost. It unfortunately also gave rise to a whole host of fake mediums and charlatans who preyed on believers often demanding great sums of money to contact the dead in their own intricately rigged parlors.

Still, it never stopped Houdini’s pursuit or his study.

“He really wanted to find proof; he wanted it to exist,” Hall continued. “He had the largest collection of books on spiritualism in the entire world at the time.”

And so, Hall followed in the legend’s footsteps, and has spent years often debunking paranormal phenomena while still holding out hope to find a case that could not be dis-proven.

Oddly enough, Hall grew up not too far away from what could be considered Ground Zero for one of the most active and without a doubt the most witnessed cases of poltergeist infestation the U.S. has ever seen.

The case involved the unassuming home of the Goodin family on Lindley Street in Bridgeport, Connecticut who were plagued by nearly constant activity for more than two years after adopting a young girl named Marcia after the death of their own child. Witnesses, and there were more than you can imagine, reported seeing furniture move, the sound of strange knockings, physical contact with an invisible force, and even audible voices that seemed to come from nowhere.

Hall had heard about the house when he was a child, but it had never really been on his investigative radar as an adult at least in part because of his natural skepticism.

The crowds that gathered outside the Goodin home.

“I would do magic shows later on and I’d have people come up to me and ask me what I thought about the house on Lindley Street I’d tell them anyone could throw dishes around and then call the newspapers,” he says, laughing. “They’d ask me why people would do that and I’d tell them that people do all kinds of crazy things. Rich people commit fraud all the time. Human behavior often doesn’t make sense.”

Finally, after years of this, someone posted in a Facebook group that had been set up for people who grew up in Bridgeport asking if anyone remembered the haunting at the house on Lindley Street. For whatever reason, that post clicked for Hall and for the first time ever he began actually researching the case.

He really had no idea what he would discover, nor the hours, days, weeks, and months the case would consume.

The first thing that struck the author was the scope of coverage of the events. Newspapers as far away as Australia and China had written about the occurrences in 1974 at the height of the phenomena, and Hall began making a list of everyone whose name was mentioned in the articles.

The first person he reached out to, former police officer Joe Tomek, was admittedly hesitant at first. He eventually opened up to Hall, however, telling him that he was about ninety-seven percent certain that what he saw was real.

He also told Hall that the department forced him to be interviewed about what he saw. With that information in hand, he went on to track down Boyce Beatty, the man who, it turned out had conducted those interviews.

“I contacted Boyce as he was listed as one of the investigators who spent time in the house, and mentioned the interviews. He told me he had conducted the interviews himself,” the author explains. “So, I asked if he had access to them and he said, ‘Well, I think so. They’re in my basement.'”

It was Hall’s first really big breakthrough in his research and he quickly made plans to meet Beatty at his home. Beatty told him that the interviews were taken with promises made to the family that they’d be kept private, but that he was willing to share them as the Mr. and Mrs. Goodin were deceased and Marcia had disappeared completely upon reaching adulthood.

Hall left Beatty’s home with 22 cassette tapes plus eight additional hours worth of reel-to-reel tape of police interviews which he had to have converted in order to listen to their contents. By the time he was 22 or 23 hours into the 30 plus hours of recordings, he could no longer deny the validity of what he had heard.

The numerous tapes and reel-to-reel recordings of interviews taken 1974-75.

“I told a fellow magician friend of mine, ‘I can’t tell you what happened for certain but I can tell you something happened here,'” Hall says. “It was the first time where you not only had a lot of witnesses but you actually had multiple witnesses describing the exact same incidents in the house from their own perspective.”

Adding to the validity of the witness statements for Hall was the timeline in which their testimonies were taken. Most of them happened within weeks of their witnessing the strange phenomena inside the house, not years or even decades later as is so often the case.

With all this evidence, Hall decided that the story needed to be told in the most definitive way possible, and he set out to write it all down. It was an act that, he would discover later, would provide closure for an entire community of people who had been touched by the goings on in the house.

“It was a weird sort of Six Degrees of Kevin Bacon kind of thing,” he points out. “This was Six Degrees of Lindley Street, and even after the book was published, I would have people come up to me at signing and readings to thank me for reporting all of this. Their fathers or siblings or whoever had been witnesses or had been among the crowds who stood outside the house and saw two large stone swans planters move on their own, and this validated what they’d always believed.”

This idea of closure is very important to the author and also to many who were involved in some way at the time. This was, after all, a very human story, happening to an otherwise very normal family who were confronted with not only dealing with the extreme activity going on inside their home, but also the growing crowds who gathered outside hoping to witness something and failing that, to make fun of those who said they had.

“Jerry [the father] was trying to go to work and people wouldn’t stop harassing him and making fun of him,” Hall says. “Their tires were slashed and people would pull their clothes off the line outside. Jerry was a maintenance man and Laura was a housewife and this didn’t just become public. It became extremely public, especially when Ed and Lorraine Warren became involved.”

Ed and Lorraine Warren

Ed and Lorraine Warren are almost synonymous with Paranormal Investigation, their many investigations being heavily documented and scrutinized for decades, but they were known to come on a bit strong. Ed especially, perhaps because he wanted so badly to be believed and to show others proof of what he and Lorraine discovered, was notorious for calling the press when they came across an especially convincing case.

“The family became quite angry when Ed called the AP Wire to report the story,” Hall points out. “They were trying to keep everything quiet, and when the Warrens brought in video and other equipment, the Goodins put their foot down.”

When the local police department decided to claim that the entire series of events was a hoax after it was discovered that Marcia had been responsible for certain “events”, they even went so far as to accuse Ed Warren of giving everyone in the house candies laced with LSD.

Through all of this, Hall repeats that it was really the overwhelming amount of witnesses and statements that make this case so compelling. It was a small house and the fact that phenomena would be happening in every single room simultaneously cements the validity of poltergeist activity in the home.

“You simply could not fake all of that without someone seeing it,” he says.

After the police department declared the entire affair a hoax, the crowds began to die down but the abuse and taunts thrown at the family? Not so much.

They moved away, and after she graduated Marcia disappeared completely, though Hall did eventually find that she’d moved to Canada and died at the age of 52 from complications from MS and epilepsy.

“We know that there seems to be a link between epilepsy and poltergeist activity,” he says. “I say seems to be because there just hasn’t been enough research into the subject, but it does make sense to find that out about her.”

When no one came forward to claim Marcia’s ashes, Hall signed for them and kept them himself until a member of her biological family came forward. It was an enlightening experience to learn more about that family and the reasons why she was given up for adoption, which he included in a later edition of the book.

The book itself is one of the most interesting of its kind that I have ever read including transcriptions of numerous interviews, police statements, etc., and presenting its readers with a staggering amount of information, and I kept wondering with the amount of movies we’ve seen in the genre that deal with real life paranormal stories, why it was that no one has stepped in to adapt it for the screen.

Perhaps it’s only a matter of time until they do.

In the meantime, be sure to check out The World’s Most Haunted House: The True Story of the Bridgeport Poltergeist on Lindley Street. It’s available on multiple formats, including and Audible edition.

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Another Creepy Spider Movie Hits Shudder This Month

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Good spider films are a theme this year. First, we had Sting and then there was Infested. The former is still in theaters and the latter is coming to Shudder starting April 26.

Infested has been getting some good reviews. People are saying that it’s not only a great creature feature but also a social commentary on racism in France.

According to IMDb: Writer/director Sébastien Vanicek was looking for ideas around the discrimination faced by black and Arab-looking people in France, and that led him to spiders, which are rarely welcome in homes; whenever they’re spotted, they’re swatted. As everyone in the story (people and spiders) is treated like vermin by society, the title came to him naturally.

Shudder has become the gold standard for streaming horror content. Since 2016, the service has been offering fans an expansive library of genre movies. in 2017, they began to stream exclusive content.

Since then Shudder has become a powerhouse in the film festival circuit, buying distribution rights to movies, or just producing some of their own. Just like Netflix, they give a film a short theatrical run before adding it to their library exclusively for subscribers.

Late Night With the Devil is a great example. It was released theatrically on March 22 and will begin streaming on the platform starting April 19.

While not getting the same buzz as Late Night, Infested is a festival favorite and many have said if you suffer from arachnophobia, you might want to take heed before watching it.

Infested

According to the synopsis, our main character, Kalib is turning 30 and dealing with some family issues. “He’s fighting with his sister over an inheritance and has cut ties with his best friend. Fascinated by exotic animals, he finds a venomous spider in a shop and brings it back to his apartment. It only takes a moment for the spider to escape and reproduce, turning the whole building into a dreadful web trap. The only option for Kaleb and his friends is to find a way out and survive.”

The film will be available to watch on Shudder starting April 26.

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Part Concert, Part Horror Movie M. Night Shyamalan’s ‘Trap’ Trailer Released

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In true Shyamalan form, he sets his film Trap inside a social situation where we aren’t sure what is going on. Hopefully, there is a twist at the end. Furthermore, we hope it’s better than the one in his divisive 2021 movie Old.

The trailer seemingly gives away a lot, but, as in the past, you can’t rely on his trailers because they are often red herrings and you are being gaslit to think a certain way. For instance, his movie Knock at the Cabin was completely different than what the trailer implied and if you hadn’t read the book on which the film is based it was still like going in blind.

The plot for Trap is being dubbed an “experience” and we aren’t quite sure what that means. If we were to guess based on the trailer, it’s a concert movie wrapped around a horror mystery. There are original songs performed by Saleka, who plays Lady Raven, a kind of Taylor Swift/Lady Gaga hybrid. They have even set up a Lady Raven website to further the illusion.

Here is the fresh trailer:

According to the synopsis, a father takes his daughter to one of Lady Raven’s jam-packed concerts, “where they realize they’re at the center of a dark and sinister event.”

Written and directed by M. Night Shyamalan, Trap stars Josh Hartnett, Ariel Donoghue, Saleka Shyamalan, Hayley Mills and Allison Pill. The film is produced by Ashwin Rajan, Marc Bienstock and M. Night Shyamalan. The executive producer is Steven Schneider.

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Woman Brings Corpse Into Bank To Sign Loan Papers

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Warning: This is a disturbing story.

You have to be pretty desperate for money to do what this Brazilian woman did at the bank to get a loan. She wheeled in a fresh corpse to endorse the contract and she seemingly thought the bank employees wouldn’t notice. They did.

This weird and disturbing story comes via ScreenGeek an entertainment digital publication. They write that a woman identified as Erika de Souza Vieira Nunes pushed a man she identified as her uncle into the bank pleading with him to sign loan papers for $3,400. 

If you’re squeamish or easily triggered, be aware that the video captured of the situation is disturbing. 

Latin America’s largest commercial network, TV Globo, reported on the crime, and according to ScreenGeek this is what Nunes says in Portuguese during the attempted transaction. 

“Uncle, are you paying attention? You must sign [the loan contract]. If you don’t sign, there’s no way, as I cannot sign on your behalf!”

She then adds: “Sign so you can spare me further headaches; I can’t bear it any longer.” 

At first we thought this might be a hoax, but according to Brazilian police, the uncle, 68-year-old Paulo Roberto Braga had passed away earlier that day.

 “She attempted to feign his signature for the loan. He entered the bank already deceased,” Police Chief Fábio Luiz said in an interview with TV Globo. “Our priority is to continue investigating to identify other family members and gather more information regarding this loan.”

If convicted Nunes could be facing jail time on charges of fraud, embezzlement, and desecration of a corpse.

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