Swami Laura Horos was a late 19th and early 20th century medium.
Background
She claimed to have been born in Italy in 1854, the daughter of King Ludwig I of Bavaria and his notorious mistress, the dancer Lola Montez, and that she was raised by foster parents from a young age. However, it seems that she was born in Harrodsburg, Kentucky in 1849, while her father Professor John Chaplain to the Forces Salomon, was a Professor of Music at Greenville Female Institute, also known as Daughters" College, now the Beaumont Inn.
Career
She was convicted of fraud several times in the United States, and was tried for rape and fraud in London in 1901. She was described by Harry Houdini as "one of the most extraordinary fake mediums and mystery swindlers the world has ever known". Her given name was Ann O"Delia Salomon.
She seems to have been married many times, and used the names Princess Editha Lola Montez, Edith Solomon, Della Ann O"Sullivan, Ann O"Delia Diss Debar (or Dis De Bar), Vera Ava, Madame Messant or McGoon, or Swami Viva Ananda.
She claimed to be the wife of West Virginia statesman Joseph H. Diss Debar, and produced "spirit paintings" by Old Masters. She was prosecuted several times for fraud.
She was convicted of fraud after persuading elderly lawyer Luther Marsh to give her his townhouse on New York"s Madison Avenue, and sentenced to 6 months imprisonment in June 1888. The magician Carl Hertz appeared at the prosecution for the Horos trial in New New York
Hertz helped send Horos to jail by duplicating in court the tricks she had used in her séances.
She was imprisoned for two years in Illinois for another fraud, under the name Vera P. Ava. And as Editha Loleta Jackson, she was expelled from New Orleans in May 1899 as a swindler. She was imprisoned for 30 days later that month.
The couple went to England in the 1890s, calling themselves "Swami Laura Horos" and "Theodore Horos".
They were arrested in Birkenhead in September 1901, and charged with obtaining property by false pretenses, rape and buggery. The later charges seems to have arisen from louche sexual practices at their temple in London.
She was held in the prison in Aylesbury, and released on licence in July 1906. She spent some time in South Africa, calling herself Helena Horos of the College of Occult Sciences, and ran a fruitarian colony in Florida.
She was in Cincinnati in 1909, under the name Vera Ava, but her later whereabouts are unknown.
A biography is included in the 1938 book "Beware Familiar Spirits" by the American magician John Mulholland (reprinted in 1979).