Miller’s spiritual advisor, Rev. Charles Randall, informed The Christian Post that he has been counseling the pastor and his wife since last September (2023) and hasn’t been aware of or witnessed any abuse in their marriage.
Randell admitted that Miller and Mica’s marriage had a “little bump in the road” but “no abuse” and said that “the marriage was in the process of being restored.”
“[Mica] did not relay [she was filing for divorce] to me,” Randell said.
Miller’s spiritual advisor with him the night he received the phone call that Mica was dead.
“He was very tore up when we got the news. I was with him on Saturday night when he received the news,” Randell said. “Very, very, very, very, very tore up over it because he loved his wife very much. If the naysayers would tell the truth, they would know how much he did and tried to please his wife.”
Randell also informed The Christian Post that Miller offered to pay for Mica’s family’s travel expenses so they could attend her funeral on Sunday (May 5).
Randell wasn’t able to recall the last time he had counseled the Millers together.
One of Mica’s friends, Angela Clark, said that her family experienced “relentless attacks” from Miller after they left Solid Rock at Market Common church and claimed that Mica’s husband used Mica’s mental health issues as a “weapon to control [Mica].”
While others have posted images claiming the pastor been on dates with other women, Mica’s sister, Sierra Francis, stated in a May 2 court affidavit that Mica told her multiple times that “if I end up with a bullet in my head, it was not by me, it was JP (John-Paul).”
In one of Mica’s final Facebook posts, she wrote, “When terrible terrible TERRIBLE things happen to you… (yall know what I’m talking about;) RPF: resting peace face #stillblessed #Godisgood” above an image she took of herself smiling.
Mica’s family held a memorial for her at the same time and less than four miles from where Miller held her funeral service at the church on Sunday (May 5).
Protestors, many wearing #justiceformica t-shirts, gathered outside the property of Solid Rock at Market Common church on Sunday holding signs that read “Justice for Mica” and “Break the silence end domestic violence #justiceformica” as they chanted the words “Justice for Mica.”
Although Miller told church congregants that his wife’s cause of death was “self-induced,” authorities haven’t released Mica’s cause of death and are still investigating.
Updated to include the latest developments: On May 7, the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office investigating Mica’s death released detailed information about her final day, including her gun purchase and her 911 call recording just prior to her death. Authorities and the medical examiner have ruled her death a suicide.
If you or someone you know is struggling with suicidal thoughts, dial 988 for the Suicide and Crisis Hotline.