John Paul Miller’s ex-wife makes shocking allegations about under-fire pastor’s sex life as she seeks custody of their children in wake of Mica Miller suicide

The ex-wife of pastor John-Paul Miller filed emergency documents late last month claiming he had multiple underage victims.

The documentation – filed on May 28 – contained graphic and disturbing new allegations against Miller, who came under a cloud of contempt following the suicide of his second wife, Mica Miller, last month. Some say he put her to death.

Miller, 30, was found dead on April 27 at Lumbee River State Park in North Carolina after a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

The new filing comes from the family court in Horry County, South Carolina, 40 miles away, where Mica initiated divorce proceedings less than two weeks before her death and hit her husband with the necessary paperwork a few days later.

Lawyers for Miller have denied claims that he abused his second wife and “groomed” her after meeting her at his church at the age of 15. children, born in 2008 and 2009.

The documentation – filed on May 28 – contained graphic and disturbing new allegations against North Carolina pastor John-Paul Miller, who came under a cloud of contempt following the suicide of his second wife, Mica Miller (right), previous month. Some believe he drove her to death

Miller, 30, was found dead at Lumbee River State Park in North Carolina on April 27 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, less than two weeks after filing for divorce.

Miller, 30, was found dead at Lumbee River State Park in North Carolina on April 27 from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, less than two weeks after filing for divorce.

News13 was the one who found the documents, which also detail John-Paul’s infidelity.

That includes an affair with Mica that began when she was working as a nanny for Miller and Alison’s children, after meeting at his church in The Market Common.

The filing also alleges that Miller regularly hired prostitutes and was “sexually inappropriate with several underage female members” of Solid Rock, where Williams worked as Miller’s assistant in 2015.

Mica joined the Church a few years earlier when she was fifteen, and three years later she married Miller’s best friend and fellow Church employee Jeremy Deas.

That marriage ended in divorce when Mica was 21, two years before she married Miller in 2017. Williams and Miller divorced in 2016.

At the time, Mica remained on friendly terms with Alison and her stepchildren, according to court documents, which seek to grant Williams immediate temporary sole custody of their two youngest while suspending contact between them and Miller, and eventually permanent custody.

That is until Miller takes a psychological and parental fitness exam, while the Palmetto State’s troubled religious leader remains under scrutiny.

The documents further allege that Miller tightly controlled his Market Common church for years, purging membership rolls to the point where he had complete control over its day-to-day operations.

In one excerpt, Williams – who is seeking to modify a joint custody agreement based on “possible imminent danger that could be caused to the [children] – writes: ‘In 2015, [Miller] was pastor of Solid Rock Ministries and I served as his assistant in pastoral duties.

The filing, from Miller's first wife Alison Williams, further alleges that Miller regularly hired prostitutes and was

The filing, from Miller’s first wife Alison Williams, further alleges that Miller regularly hired prostitutes and was “sexually inappropriate with several underage female members” of Solid Rock (seen here), where Williams worked as Miller’s assistant in 2015.

‘We broke up after I heard it [Miller] had an adulterous affair with our former nanny, Mica Miller.

‘[Miller] told me that in addition to his affair with Mica, he also employed prostitutes and had behaved sexually inappropriately with several underage female members of our church.

“He blames his immoral sexual behavior on the sexual abuse he experienced for years at the hands of his father, Wayne Miller.

‘The church asked for this [Miller] enroll in a comprehensive sexual addiction program, but despite promising to do so, as far as I know, that never happened,” it continues, before describing how “the affair between [Miller] and Mica tore apart our personal and church family.”

‘[The affair] caused an imaginable amount of pain and discord in the lives of so many innocent people who truly trusted and believed in [my husband]’, writes Alison, who was married to Miller for sixteen years.

‘At that time the church heard about it [Miller’s] After an affair with Mica, the church operated under the belief that our church’s old bylaws had been changed [the ones made by Miller]and there we operated under new statutes.

“When the council voted for it [Miller] temporarily resign from the position of lead pastor so that he can seek treatment… and focus on his recovery, rather than following the directions of our church leaders, [Miller] held a meeting and informed the council that the new bylaws were invalid.

‘That’s why, according to the old statutes, he had 100 percent decision-making power.

“That was the first time members of our church could see this [Miller] for who he really was, and he had serious concerns about his integrity and the financial structure of the church,” the filing continues.

“As a result, almost our entire congregation left the church, and [Miller] began his quest to recruit new members.’

Furthermore, the move allowed her beleaguered ex to “run Solid Rock Ministries solely at his direction,” Williams writes.

Williams’ complaint goes on to allege that Miller’s “mental health and deviant sexual addictions” only worsened after their marriage ended

Around that time, she discovered the identities of the “underage female members of the church” with whom Miller had allegedly “been inappropriate,” she said — recalling how she had contacted each of them and urged them to to go to the police.

However, they reportedly refused for fear of retaliation from the pastor, forcing her to contact the police herself to file a report.

But instead of an investigation, Williams’ intervention was met with a lukewarm response from Myrtle Beach police.

According to Williams, they told her that no one would believe her story because “[Miller] was a well-known preacher and [because] we were in the middle of a divorce’.

Her ex would marry Mica months later.

Williams' complaint goes on to allege that Miller's

Williams’ complaint goes on to allege that Miller’s “mental health and deviant sexual addictions” only worsened after their marriage ended, due to his alleged affairs with underage church members while he was also seeing Mica (seen here with Miller)

Things deteriorated for three years after that, Alison says in the document, before describing an abrupt change in the pastor’s behavior in 2021.

Arguments broke out between them around that time [Miller] and Mica would appear at the front [her and [Miller’s] children’, after which ‘[Miller’s] mental health continued to deteriorate.’

“At times he waived agreed upon visitation periods,” Williams writes, “based on his own claims that he was not mentally well enough to take charge of the children.

She also alleges that Miller used the joint custody designation as a mechanism to harass, threaten and control her, writing that the parties have been unable to communicate or co-parent effectively as a result.

Williams further claims that “it would be detrimental to the safety, well-being and emotional health of both.” [her] and the minor children to continue to share joint custody,” and that “based on information and belief, [Miller] continues to engage in deviant sexual behavior.

‘[He] exposed the parties’ minor children to an immoral and unsafe environment,” she writes at another point, before commenting on the recent the death of Molenaar,

She firmly believes, given the “circumstances” and “tragic facts” surrounding the case, that “placing the children in the care of [Miller] would [put] she is in imminent danger,” and writes how the 30-year-old contacted her to “[share] intimate details about the behavior of [Miller] and concerns about the safety of the minor children.”

She claims that up until the time of Mica’s death, her successor provided “a safety net” for the children during their visitation periods, but “based on her recent tragic death, that is no longer possible.”

Mica’s body was found on April 27 at 4:23 PM EST at Lumber River State Park in North Carolina, in a swampy area about 100 feet from where shell casings and her belongings were discovered.

Mica died less than two weeks after filing for divorce from her husband – and less than 48 hours after her husband was served with divorce papers.

Following a medical examiner’s review of the scene, Miller’s death was officially ruled a suicide, a ruling that was also made thanks to the release of a 9-1-1 call she made before allegedly shooting herself in the head shot with a gun she had purchased hours earlier. .

Miller has been cleared of any wrongdoing, but given the strange way her husband broke the news of her death to their congregation – instructing them to “leave the church quietly and not talk about the announcement here in the building” – suspicions of foul play game has prevailed.

Mica’s family has argued that her body was ‘placed’ in the part of the park where it was found by police, suggesting her suicide was ‘staged’.

A hearing on Williams’ custody application is scheduled for June 6, where a judge will decide whether a psychiatric evaluation of Miller is necessary.