Murdaugh Murders Podcast - COJ #73 - Justice for Mica: With FBI Raid, JP Miller’s World Comes Crumbling Down
Episode Date: November 7, 2024UPDATE: JP Miller was arrested for third degree assault. Justice for Mica Miller is percolating six months and more than 20 episodes after investigative journalists Mandy Matney and Liz Farrell ...began reporting her the death and what her life looked like in the leadup to it. On Friday, the FBI finally moved in on Mica’s husband... Myrtle Beach Pastor JP Miller, who stands accused of harassing, stalking and coercively controlling her during their marriage. For more than five hours, around two dozen federal agents searched his house and left with computers and boxes of alleged evidence. On this deep dive episode, Mandy, Liz and reporter Beth Braden — talk about how the raid unfolded and what happens next. Days after the raid, JP’s church, Solid Rock At Market Common, appears to have shut its doors for good... What is JP doing with all the church’s assets...? Look like a fire-sale to commemorate the occasion. Plus, updates in the Bowen Turner case and the terms of his parole. And what is happening to Christa Bauer Gilley’s kids now that their father, Lee Gilley, is out on bond after being charged with their mother’s murder? Episode Resources SC Supreme Court order denying Myra Crosby’s request “Houston man accused in wife’s death considered fleeing, family says” - Houston Chronicle GoFundMe for Christa Bauer Gilley Interstate Domestic Violence Statute 1118. Prosecutions Under 18 U.S.C. § 2261(a)(1) Beth Braden’s Nov 1 Post on X about FBI Raid Liz Farrell’s Nov 1 Post on X about Items Removed Mica’s List + Law Stay Tuned, Stay Pesky and Stay in the Sunlight...☀️ Join Luna Shark Premium today at Lunashark.Supercast.com. Premium Members also get access to searchable case files, written articles with documents, case photos, episode videos and exclusive live experiences with our hosts on lunasharkmedia.com all in one place. CLICK HERE to learn more: https://bit.ly/3BdUtOE. If you are in crisis, please call, text or chat with the Suicide and Crisis Lifeline at 988, or contact the Crisis Text Line by texting TALK to 741741. What We're Buying... Hungry Root - https://hungryroot.com/mandy to get 40% off your first delivery and get your free veggies.. Hungry Root is the easiest way to eat healthy. They send you fresh, high-quality groceries, simple, delicious recipes, and essential supplements. Task Rabbit - Use promo code "mandy" at https://www.taskrabbit.com/ for 15% off your task. Task Rabbit connects you with skilled Taskers to help with cleaning, moving, furniture assembly, home repairs, and more. Peloton - onepeloton.com Find your push. Find your power with Peloton at onepeloton.com. Here's a link to some of our favorite things: https://amzn.to/4cJ0eVn And a special thank you to our other amazing sponsors: Microdose.com, PELOTON, and VUORI. Use promo code "MANDY" for a special offer! *** ALERT: If you ever notice audio errors in the pod, email info@lunasharkmedia.com and we'll send fun merch to the first listener that finds something that needs to be adjusted! *** For current & accurate updates: TrueSunlight.com facebook.com/TrueSunlightPodcast/ Instagram.com/TrueSunlightPod Twitter.com/mandymatney Twitter.com/elizfarrell youtube.com/@LunaSharkMedia tiktok.com/@lunasharkmedia Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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I don't know if or when we will ever see J.P. Miller in handcuffs, but after the FBI conducted a robust raid of his Myrtle Beach home on Friday and after watching his castle
of solid rock crumble this past week, I am more hopeful than ever that justice for Micah is coming.
My name is Mandi Matney.
This is True Sunlight, a podcast exposing crime and corruption previously known as the
Murdoch Murders Podcast.
True Sunlight is a Lunashark production written with journalist Liz Farrell. Hello. Not gonna lie, I have been crying off and on all day. And I haven't gathered my
thoughts completely as to what is happening with our country right now. But honestly,
I'm not ready to talk about it. And I don't want to talk about that right now. I want to talk about things that we can control.
I want to talk about justice that we can work toward.
I want to talk about crimes that need sunlight.
And today we have a lot to talk about.
Here's Liz.
As always, we have a few quick updates before we talk about the very major development in
the Micah Francis case.
First, today officially marks one week since the South Carolina Department of Corrections
decided to try, try again with its wacky experiment of seeing whether Bowen Turner's prefrontal cortex hole has closed as per his attorney
at his last state plea hearing,
a plea hearing that cleared the way for his parole.
Bowen was released last Thursday
and according to the DOC's website,
he is under intense supervision.
What's intense supervision, right?
Great question because as soon as we saw the phrase, we were like, sure, we'll believe
that when we see it.
Remember, South Carolina is a state that couldn't even keep track of where Bowen was when he
was on GPS monitoring and house arrest for two rape charges.
And not only that, South Carolina is a state
that when presented with the hardcore evidence
that hey, Bowen Turner has been breaking the conditions
of his bond repeatedly, it chose to reward him
with a reduction in charges, rape charges,
and a sweetheart plea deal of probation
instead of holding him accountable.
And as you all know, he's outdone himself in proving just how little he deserved that.
Anyway, we asked around what intensive supervision actually means. Anecdotally,
we were told that intensive supervision is what regular parole should probably look like,
meaning regular parole conditions are laughable.
That said, Kristi Shane, who is the spokesperson
for the Department of Corrections,
said that as part of this intensive supervision,
Bowen agreed to one of the standard conditions
for all YOA releases, which is to say,
quote, I shall not use controlled substances
except when properly prescribed
by a licensed physician, not consume alcoholic beverages to excess, nor enter establishments
whose primary business is the sale and drinking of alcoholic beverages. Further, I shall submit
to testing for drugs alcohol when required when required, and agree that the
test result may be used as evidence of violating my parole. May, not will, right?
Remember during his final plea hearing in late September, Bowen was sentenced to time
served for resisting arrest back in March. And that meant he avoided what could have and to our minds should have amounted
to another year in prison. As part of that hearing,
his attorney said that Bowen had agreed to receive a shot on the day of his
release that would prevent him from feeling the effects of alcohol.
What I'm saying is this Bowen bought himself and his community, as it were,
30 days at least. Now that we know alcohol monitoring is a part of this though,
that does ease our minds a little. However, we don't know what that looks like. The Department
of Corrections is making us FOIA for more details on the terms of Bowen's parole,
so we'll update you on that when we finally know something.
And that pledge or honor code that YOA offenders
have to agree to upon release is utterly meaningless
unless there's a monitoring system that's actually in place.
So this is all to say we don't know yet
what intensive supervision looks like.
We don't know if that includes actual active monitoring or
if this is just some performative thing that's getting done because the Department of Corrections
knows we're watching. We hope Bowen has turned a corner and is taking this opportunity
more seriously than he did all the other chances he has been given. In the meantime,
everyone stay safe out there. Our next update. The South Carolina Supreme Court delivered a beautiful blow
to one of Elec Murdoch's core peripheral arguments
in trying to get his murder conviction overturned.
I say peripheral because I'm referring to his argument
that the egg lady jurors dismissal
is somehow relevant to his verdict
when she didn't render a verdict.
On Thursday, justices denied the egg lady's jurors demand
to become part of the case
and her motion to unseal records
related to the investigation
that led to her getting kicked off the jury on the last day
due to her blabbing about the trial outside the courtroom
in direct violation of the judge's orders.
The funny thing about this is that Elex attorneys argued in support of this by claiming that
transparency was the most important thing at stake here.
And I'm not kidding you.
They argued this.
Elex quote, admitted financial crimes likely could not have happened in the sunlight of
full public access to the involved judicial proceedings. quote, admitted financial crimes likely could not have happened in the sunlight of full
public access to the involved judicial proceedings.
So they're blaming who for that?
Judge Carmen Mullen?
The other judges in the 14th Circuit who might have gone along with Elex's request to not
file documents properly or publicly?
If only the judges had been more transparent.
Because if they are saying that, we agree, obviously, as far as what happened in the
past anyway.
As far as the egg lady is concerned, we still regard that as a big joke, where reality and
the truth and facts do not seem to matter to the Egg Lady, to ELEC, to their delusional
supporters and advocates, or to their lawyers. The Egg Lady's lawyer, by the way, is Joe McCullough,
Dick Harputlian's bestie. So essentially, this is the court knocking back the nonsense. Like we said
on Cup of Justice this week, the Egg Lady's request to be part of this case, again, denied, is
all part of Team Murdock's strategy to blur the facts and seize the headlines in Elec's
favor. They want people to regard her removal as some sort of conspiracy involving Becky,
but it's not. And it's dumb that we have to keep saying this over and over again, so
we won't.
While this does not mean that Elex appeal is doomed by any stretch, it does serve as
an early test of just how much the Supreme Court might be willing to entertain their
sideshow hustle.
Okay, now let's talk about the Krista Bauer Gilly case in Houston.
As y'all know, Krista was killed on October 7th and she was nine weeks pregnant at the
time.
Her husband, Lee, is charged with strangling her to death.
Both are from South Carolina.
Lee initially told police that he and Krista had gotten into an argument and that he had
found her unconscious three hours later. He told police
she had taken drugs to kill herself and that he tried to give her CPR to revive her. Then,
Christa's autopsy contradicted his claims, which anecdotally seems to be a disturbingly
common reality that we are learning more and more about in cases across the country.
A woman dies, the man in her life claims it was a suicide, and it turns out it wasn't.
So on Friday, the Houston Chronicle reported on what went down at a hearing about the custody
of their two small children, and it is telling.
First, let's do a quick refresher. Lee is out on a $1 million bond.
He's on GPS monitoring and on house arrest, at least between the hours of 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.
We still do not know where his house arrest is supposed to be. That was concerning to us last
week and even more concerning now after this custody hearing.
Because here's the thing, as a part of Lee's bond agreement, he is barred from seeing his children
and restrained from going to the house that he shared with Krista as well as his children's
daycare. Which is significant, right? Because when you're talking about child custody,
obviously the kids shouldn't be in a place where Lee Gillie might be.
Now, the bombshell that came out right after that hearing is that Lee's brother and father-in-law told the judge that after police interviewed him about Krista's death, Lee considered fleeing the Houston area with the kids.
Lee's attorney denies this, obviously, because if Lee were planning to make a run for it,
that would be a big deal because bond is for people who are not flight risks or dangers
to the community.
So that is another thing that is concerning here.
Now as far as the hearing goes, Lee's brother
and Christa's family both want a custody of the children.
According to the Chronicle, Lee's brother's attorney
asked the judge to weigh the needs of the children
over Gilley's pending murder case,
which the murder in question is about their mother.
So to ask the court to overlook that kind of shows you
where the guy stands, right? And while we are not saying that his brother would expose
the kids to Lee, we are saying that it puts them one degree of separation away from him
at a time when the court has been clear that he is to have no contact with them. Luckily, the judge appears to have been on
the same page with us about that. Sort of. She granted temporary joint conservatorship
to Christa's parents and to Lee's sister-in-law. Not his brother, but his sister-in-law. It
is not clear if that's referring to Lee's brother's wife or another member of the family's spouse.
And it's also not clear whether the sister-in-law is still married to the brother,
because what difference does it actually make if they're in the same household?
The judge told the court that the children must stay mostly in Texas,
and she reiterated that Lee cannot be around them until after
this case has been adjudicated. According to the Chronicle, the lawyer for
Christus' parents asked Lee's brother and his wife whether they thought Lee was a
danger to the children and they both said no, calling him one of the best
fathers they know, inciting the fact that he was around the kids in the days after
Christus murder and his arrest.
Which okay, let's face it, the stakes are much higher for Lee right now, right?
He has a lot to lose and if being pregnant is the most dangerous time for a woman when
it comes to the risk of getting murdered, then let's talk about what might be the
most dangerous time
for a murder suspect, innocent or guilty.
We are continuing to hound officials
to find out where exactly Lee Gilley is supposed to be.
And we are continuing to talk to sources on background
about Lee and Christa Gilley.
If you knew them, please contact us.
What we are hearing so far is surprising and strange,
and we hope to share more on this case soon.
Also, in the meantime, Christa's friends
have been resharing the GoFundMe for Christa's family.
An update on the GoFundMe that has raised
more than $194,000 has a recently updated goal of $250,000.
They said this is because of increased financial needs now that the Bowers,
Christa's family, have to move to Texas to care for the children likely until Lee's trial.
The update said, quote, the family now faces the reality of planning Christa's funeral,
managing their businesses
from afar and maintaining two separate households, all while shouldering the immeasurable emotional
toll of this loss.
They are deeply grateful to have the children with them as they know the road ahead will
be filled with challenges no family should ever have to face.
We shared the GoFundMe for Christa's family in the description,
and we encourage all of you to support them and to share it.
Okay, so now it is time to talk about what ranks up there as probably the best news that
we have gotten since Elec Murdock was convicted for murder
and we watched his best buddies get
locked up.
We are all about justice in small, daily doses.
They are daily victories when we put sunlight on lies, contradictions, hypocrisies, corruption
and incompetence.
All things that contribute to the two systems of justice, right? We take immense pride in being able to deliver those doses through our reporting each week.
But man, it feels really good to watch justice play out in the most dramatic of ways.
We are going to have reporter Beth Braden, who has been on top of this story since the beginning,
tell you about how the news unfolded Friday when the FBI finally raided the home of John
Paul Miller.
And she will tell you about that right after a quick break.
We'll be right back.
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At Mazda, we craft cars for those who choose to do more
than simply move.
So choose joy, choose the road,
and choose to get out there.
Choose your calling, choose to make memories,
and choose more of what moves you.
Mazda. Move and be moved.
That's me! I'm not getting out the door!
So, there we were on Friday morning minding our own business when I saw YouTuber Robbie
Harvey tweet about the presence of law enforcement at JP Miller's home on Coldwater Circle in
Myrtle Beach just afternoon.
Hearing that law enforcement was at JP's home, or even at Solid Rock, has become a
regular expectation for us at this point.
We've told you about the numerous times the cops have been there in the past year, with the most recent occasion being
a neighborhood argument about a four-wheeler in September. On Friday, though, photos and
video from the scene showed us that the vehicles at JP's home were completely unmarked, not
an Horry County cop in sight. So I reached out to Kevin Wheeler, the FBI's public
information officer in the Columbia office. Thus far, the FBI, as is typical for them,
has been very tight-lipped on JP's case. Typically, they don't even acknowledge the
existence of an open investigation. But they did confirm that there was one in this case back in May when Wheeler
told me that he didn't dispute the Robeson County, North Carolina Sheriff's Department,
saying that they had called on the FBI to investigate following information they received
throughout the course of investigating Micah's alleged suicide.
So when I called Kevin, I wasn't actually expecting to get a whole lot of information
about what was happening at JP's house.
At that point, we didn't even know if it was the FBI there.
But sure enough, Wheeler told me that the Bureau was, quote, conducting court-authorized
law enforcement activity, end quote, at the home of John Paul Miller.
The FBI finally confirmed court-authorized law enforcement activity in an investigation
that has been going on for months, but before this moment we were never able to attribute
the information we were reporting to a named law enforcement official.
And boy, was their search of J.P. Miller's house a big deal. In addition to the fleet of unmarked SUVs, the FBI had brought a large evidence processing
truck which was the same size and shape as a small moving truck you might rent to move
your stuff across town.
The FBI truck, however, had all kinds of doors and panels that opened up to reveal everything
that the agents needed to process the scene.
Boxes, bags, swabs, fingerprint powder, you name it. They also brought a camera and at least three
members of the evidence response team. The ERT are the folks who are trained to document, collect,
and catalog physical and forensic evidence. You don't need these guys if you're just swinging
by to seize a laptop and cell phone on your lunch break before heading back to
headquarters. So that tells us they were looking for more than just the
electronics and were interested in other kinds of evidence. The commotion quickly
drew a crowd outside JP's house, so by about 1 p.m. we had access to a couple of
live streams and were receiving photos and video from sources
on the scene.
After a few hours, protesters who have been posted outside Solid Rock each Sunday during
service arrived at JP's house where they continued their chants of, Justice for Micah and You
Can't Hide from the FBI.
JP wasn't there at the time, but we think the protesters were assuming he might have
been tuned into one of the livestreams and would hear them.
According to bystanders, JP wasn't home when more than two dozen, yes I said that right,
more than two dozen FBI agents descended on his home.
The buzz is that JP was over at Starbucks when the agents approached him to give him
the sealed search warrant
and tell him that they were about to raid his place, the same place he shared with Micah after
their marriage in late 2017. We don't know for certain when Micah was last at the home,
but JP's probate filing from the summer says she was there for about four hours on March 19,
2024, which is more than a month before her death.
On Friday, the dark blue pickup that JP is known to drive was not at the home when we started
getting photos and video from the raid, but the DeLorean he had bought right after Micah died
was visible in the garage with its Back to the Future themed vanity plate, out time. O-U-T-T-I-M-E. Also in the garage was that four-wheeler that was
at the center of the September police presence at JP's house. Speaking of the garage, it was opened
and closed several times during the raid, probably to keep prying eyes from seeing what they were
searching for and or finding in there. Back in October, JP's oldest son,
Logan Hardy, posted the four-wheeler for sale on Facebook for his dad and the photos showed
several plastic bins on shelves in the garage at that time, so there was plenty to look
through from what we could see. Now, the search warrant for JP's house is sealed, so we don't
know what they were looking for specifically. However, a source with knowledge
of the investigation says that the alleged crime being investigated is interstate domestic violence.
Interstate domestic violence has two offenses. One has to do with quote travel or conduct
of the offender and the second is quote causing travel of a victim. That second offense says, quote,
a person who causes a spouse, intimate partner, or dating partner to travel in interstate or foreign commerce
or to enter or leave Indian country by force, coercion, duress, or fraud,
and who, in the course of, as a result of, or to facilitate such conduct or travel,
commits or attempts to commit a crime of violence against that spouse, intimate partner, or dating
partner, shall be punished as provided in subsection B. This is a serious charge, by the way.
If JP does get charged with this, he could face up to life in prison. Like I said,
it's no joke. And keep in mind, Micah was a resident of South Carolina and traveled to
North Carolina where authorities say she killed herself. I have reached out to JP's attorney,
Russell B. Long, for comment and to find out more about the warrant, but he has not returned my call.
JP Miller has not been charged with any crime related to Micah's death in either state
or federal court.
He also denies ever abusing Micah in any sense of the word.
On Friday after the raid, we watched on a livestream as agents removed several cardboard
boxes and paper bags, as well as what looked like a desktop computer, an iMac computer, and some
kind of cardboard cylinder.
We think the cardboard cylinder was a container for something else, but we have no idea what
was in it.
In all, it took agents nearly five hours to go through the home, and this is not a big
house.
According to an old Zillow listing, it's a three-bedroom, two-bathroom house coming
in at 2,00 square feet.
Let's say bystanders were wrong about the number of agents and it was only 10 or 12 of them.
That's still pretty heavy coverage for a home that size.
From everything we're seeing, the feds had the place smothered and covered.
We also know that the FBI did not go to the actual church building at 803 Howard Avenue,
which is interesting because I think we all assumed that the church itself would be part
of any investigation since JP is the registered agent of Solid Rock Ministries, Inc., which
owns the church, the house on Coldwater Circle, and two parcels of land on the Highway 17
bypass that are slated to become the home
of a new building for Solid Rock.
And speaking of those two parcels of land on the bypass, there was another incident
we need to talk about and dispel some of the social media scuttlebutt.
On Friday morning, prior to the raid at J.P. Miller's house, there was a suicide on the
side of the U.S. 17 bypass right along the property owned by Solid Rock. That
property is also across Highway 17 from the entrance to JP's neighborhood. That road
is a busy one. According to the redacted CAD and police report from Horry County, a passerby
called 911 at 9.45 a.m. to report a woman lying on the side of the road near a black Cadillac SUV.
Horry County Police Department Officer Robert Amon noted in his report that there was a black
semi-automatic handgun near the victim's right hand and there was blood coming from under her
head. Additionally, the report notes that another bystander told police that her surveillance camera had recorded a gunshot between the hours of 3.30
and 5.30 on Friday morning. Now, of course, somebody turning up dead at or near Solid Rock
property on the same day the FBI raids J.P. Miller's home did not feel like a coincidence
whatsoever. But this time, it was. Let me lay out why. First, I know the name of the
woman who died and we send her family and those who loved her our deepest condolences. I can tell
by reading the Tributes Tour on the obituary page at the Funeral Homes website that she was beloved
by many. While we won't be sharing her name to protect her privacy and the privacy of her family,
I can tell you I spent hours chatting with sources and doing lots of research in an attempt
to find any concrete links between the woman, her husband, or her family to Solid Rock,
JP, or his father, and there aren't any.
Additionally, they appear to be from different faith backgrounds that wouldn't
generally attend the same style of church as Solid Rock. It's a strange coincidence in the same way
it was a strange coincidence when a woman jumped from a Buford County bridge on the morning after
Paul Murdoch and Maggie Murdoch were killed in 2021. People were convinced the jumper had something
to do with the murders, but there was no link.
There's also another piece of misinformation floating around TikTok.
This one from a TikTok user known as theiphoneguru, who generally livestreams the protests that have been happening outside Solid Rock each Sunday for the last six months. On Saturday morning, a video showing the Emmons Preserve neighborhood pool was posted to TikTok
and YouTube in which Guru, as he's known to his followers, is heard on video saying that
the Horry County police and the FBI had just left.
He implied that they had been there in connection with the death of Chris Skinner, the quadriplegic
husband of Suzy Skinner, who drowned in his wheelchair in 2021.
According to court records, Suie Skinner and JP were
romantically involved while they were married to Chris and Micah, and she has been spotted with
him in public several times since Micah died. I checked with Horry County and they have no record
of being in that neighborhood Friday night. Additionally, that neighborhood is in Myrtle
Beach Police Department jurisdiction and they don't show any police activity in their crime map for that neighborhood. There's
also no evidence that the police visited the Emmons Preserve Pool or Susie Skinner's
home after the raid at JP Miller's home. And no shade, but the video that was
posted purportedly showing this so-called police presence shows no police presence.
So, let's talk a little bit about the mechanics here. First, we cannot stress this enough.
We would not have been able to see and understand the FBI raid on JP's house without the quick
thinking from citizen journalists who live-streamed from outside his house. We want to especially give a shout out to a woman named Chloe Urbon who stood outside
the house for hours so that people could see what was happening.
And it was hot in Myrtle Beach on Friday.
Chloe spotted it out for everyone, but also we want to give her props for the way she
handled herself in the situation.
We don't know if she has any formal training in journalism or communications, but she was very careful about what she said during the livestream.
She refused to speculate. She qualified everything she was saying by citing a general source
as in, this is what I was told. She never once sensationalized what was happening, and
she patiently answered commenters' questions as she went.
She was also incredibly sweet to a little boy in the neighborhood who was apparently beyond thrilled with the drama
and excited to tell everyone that he was going to be famous because he was going to be on the news.
There are so many disappointments and frustrations in what we do, especially in covering this case. So we just wanted to
highlight some positives. Okay, so back to the actual raid itself. Let's start with
the biggest question and I want to qualify it by saying I'm coming from a place of pleasant
surprise but also mild suspicion. All that for a domestic violence charge? Y'all, when I tell you how unusual it is to see this much effort go into this case,
that many resources being used, it's a dream come true, right?
How many women's deaths go deeply uninvestigated every day by law enforcement?
How many domestic violence cases get pleaded down to practically nothing
or dropped altogether? How many times have you heard about law enforcement officers arresting
both parties simply because they can't be bothered to dig deeper to find out what was
actually going on here? It's bleak. The state of how domestic violence is policed is eternally
bad. So again, yay for the FBI on this one.
But also, let's think a little cynically here for a second.
All that for one potential charge of domestic violence?
It makes us wonder if there might be something more going on.
Because like Beth said, it doesn't seem like you would need
three evidence response team members
for a couple of computers and journals.
But we're not FBI agents, so what do we know, right? Oh wait, we talked to sources. From what
we understand, this is very unexpected and unusual to see. We don't yet know what to make of that,
though, because all indications are that this is just about one charge and doesn't involve anything related to church finances, etc.
The second unusual thing, or at least unusual according to the people who are familiar with
these types of investigations, is that there appears to have been an assistant U.S. attorney
on the scene.
Our sources say they don't usually do that.
So does this mean that this case rises to a certain level within the US Attorney's office? Maybe. Certainly seems that way. But there might be something
else going on. This case is being handled by the US Attorney's office in
Florence, South Carolina. According to information online, there is an assistant
US Attorney in that office who bears a resemblance to the photos we have of the
man at the scene of the raid. According to LinkedIn, that man appears to be someone who joined the office in the past few years.
This particular prosecutor's focus, according to his LinkedIn page, is narcotics, violent crime and national security.
And he wasn't always a prosecutor.
He used to be a law enforcement officer, again, according to his LinkedIn page.
officer, again, according to his LinkedIn page. And he lists as one of the agencies he worked at as a patrol deputy as Robeson County Sheriff's Office. That's right, the same agency that
initially investigated Micah's death. Now, what does that mean? Maybe nothing, right? But it could
also mean that this case ended up where it was because maybe this prosecutor's ears perked up
when he heard there was a common denominator with it. Remember, we were originally told by the
Sheriff's Office that something came up in the regular course of their investigation that rose
to the level of getting the FBI involved. None of this changes anything. Considering this information
does help us in our pursuit of gaining insight into why there was such
a strong showing of agents on Friday. It prompts us to keep asking questions and pull at any thread
that might suggest there could be more here. Now, the warrants remain sealed. According to the Post
and Courier newspaper, Russell B. Long, who we call Russell B. Wrong, JP's attorney, said the FBI was on a fishing expedition.
If you listened to Cup of Justice this week, you know Eric Bland said this is highly unlikely.
At this point, the FBI had to have probable cause in order to get a warrant, which means
they have some sort of evidence already and had an idea of what they were looking for
while in the house.
Here's what JP's attorney also said,
quote, there was no affidavit to the search warrant,
therefore I have no idea what it's in relation to.
And then after the FBI was done with their searching,
that he was hoping this was quote, the end of it.
We don't have to remind you that over the summer
when Micah's family settled their probate case against JP,
that the same attorney made quite the show
of saying that to his knowledge,
the FBI had closed its investigation into JP.
There have also been several comments on TikTok
since then that we've seen,
in which people who appear to be supporting JP
also claimed the FBI case was closed.
Does that case seem closed to any of you?
Yeah, us neither. The raid kind of gives it away,
right? And a lawyer like Russell B. Long, who has a long history of federal cases he's worked on,
would know that this spells trouble for his goofy client. One more thing. Why was the search
warrant sealed? It didn't have to be. They could have chosen not to seal it.
Doesn't even appear to have been filed with the court yet, at least not where it's publicly visible.
The reason to seal a warrant is to obviously keep the apparent target and any potential other
targets connected to the case in the dark about the nature and scope of the investigation.
In other words, there's a reason the FBI doesn't want JP to know what
exactly they're looking at here. And something tells us that we're going to
know sooner rather than later what that reason is.
And we'll be right back. Now, in our opinion, and let's be clear about that, this raid could not have happened
to a more deserving man.
Six months and 23 episodes ago, in episode 50, we began our journey covering this case.
And now, after the FBI raid, we need to look back on what we've learned.
I'll be honest, after re-listening to episodes 50 through 57 in particular, I have realized
how much shocking information that we have uncovered in this case, and it is easy to forget key details.
Days after Micah's death, several hundred of y'all
tagged, messaged, and posted on social media
asking for us to cover this case
because of our reputation from covering the Murdoch case
in a way that forced accountability
and resulted in accountability.
We decided to cover this story for many reasons.
We understand the South Carolina justice system better than any other true crime podcast out
there.
We understand the great disadvantage women have in our system, especially when their
cases are immediately labeled as suicide.
And the more we learn about coercive control through Micah's story, and the more that
we share that knowledge with our audience, the more lives we save.
Lucky for us, Micah left a large paper trail of evidence documenting the alleged abuse
that she faced in her marriage,
nearly up until the day she died.
And her estranged husband, J.P. Miller, he also made our jobs much easier by providing
a sea of red flags for us to examine, which helped us expose his behavior over the course
of more than 20 episodes.
But the first red flag that alerted most of the world to J.P. Miller
in the wake of his wife's mysterious death
was straight from the pulpit of the preacher himself.
On Sunday, April 28th, less than 24 hours after he found out
that his 30-year-old wife had died,
John Paul Miller waited to
the end of church service at Solid Rock to deliver news that shocked the world.
I'm going to have you stand up and I'm going to make an announcement.
And after the announcement, I'm going to ask that you leave church quietly and don't talk
about the announcement here in the building, please, if you can't see. I can stand at your feet.
Before I make the announcement, I also want to say that my request to you is that you will continue to come to church and serve and give
for the next, you know, a little bit because I don't want to have...
I'm taking a little bit of a break and I don't want to have to worry about the church. My break may be a few days,
a few weeks, I don't know.
I got a call late last night.
My wife has passed away.
Yeah, it was self-induced and it was up in North Carolina.
And we're going to have a funeral for her next Sunday here at 3 p.m.
And so it's all I can, yeah, I'm just kind of going on adrenaline right now.
So y'all pray for me and my kids and everybody.
And she was, she wasn't, y'all knew that she wasn't well mentally
and that she needed a medicine that was hard to get to her.
And so I'm sure there'll be more details to come.
But just keep our family in your prayers.
And I'm going to let Pastor Randall, a bishop, he can pray.
I'll get a microphone and pray out.
And if you have anything you want to share as well.
I had to go back to this moment because this clip is what got news outlets from around the world to cover this story.
This clip is what raised True Crime creators' suspicions surrounding Micah's death.
Let's be clear, JP's PR crisis began the moment that this clip hit the internet, and
he has no one to blame for that except for himself.
The whole thing gave most of us the ick, including his own church members, who immediately felt
something was up there.
Why did he say it like that? Why did he announce Micah's
death as a suicide 10 days before authorities had ruled it a suicide? Why
was he concerned about church members leaving at this very moment? Why was he
referring to Micah as his wife when she had just served him divorce papers
for the second time in six months?
Why was he publicly blaming her mental illness like that when the investigation was very
much new and ongoing?
And why did he tell his congregation to stand up to hear such devastating news?
From there, the red flags of J.P. Miller kept popping up like whack-a-mole's.
It was surprisingly easy, actually, to gather disturbing information on this man that would
support the idea that Micah's death was going to expose something much bigger going on.
From the beginning, we felt that Micah wanted her death to expose JP.
Every piece of information we have gathered in the last six months has painted a dark
and very vivid picture of JP's allegedly abusive behavior toward Micah that did not
end when she died. Specifically, it showed us
that Micah's mental health history was not just being weaponized against her, but there were serious
questions about JP's role in her original diagnosis and subsequent treatment. In those first few days of reporting, we all read Micah's obituary
written by JP with her jaws agape. Every word felt like another stomp on her grave, and
we didn't even know the full scope of the story yet. JP wrote an entire paragraph about
how great he was and made sure that people realized that her purpose in life was serving
her husband.
And again, without even knowing JP and Micah and the extent of their history, we immediately
picked up on how odd it was that he mocked Micah's love for her family, who we later
found out he was constantly at odds with. He wrote in her obituary
that Micah loved them so much, literally with a bunch of drawn out O's. And he poked fun at Micah
by mentioning things that she did that were obviously points of contention in their marriage,
obviously points of contention in their marriage, which is something we later confirmed to be true. He mocked her ice baths, which he had blamed for causing her bipolar disorder according
to text messages. He said she loved her nice car, which was a Honda Civic, a car that she
actually owned, and the car which he took from her in February and then lied to police The dog that he was later accused of sexually abusing by a person who called the police,
but the police never investigated.
See episode 68 for that.
I told y'all, this man deserved the FBI raiding his house for hours, in our opinion, of course.
I'm not going to lie, I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie.
I'm not going to lie. See episode 68 for that. I told y'all this man deserved the FBI
raiding his house for hours, in our opinion, of course.
Oh, and at the end of the obituary,
JP urged people to donate to the Dare to Care Mission Fund
in memory of Micah.
We later would find out that JP had previously accused Micah
of stealing from that charity and he documented
that accusation in a police report twice. A move that was devastating to Micah because
she loved that charity. It was an accusation that a judge later declared unfounded. Oh,
and he was never charged with filing a false report to police afterwards, which was
one of many occasions that we found where Horry County and Myrtle Beach Police let this
man's bad behavior slide and escalate.
Hence why we are so glad the FBI is on this right now.
For me, there was one final red flag that stood out to us in week one of our Micah Francis investigation,
and that was her family's affidavits.
On May 2nd, which was just a few days after Micah's death,
Micah's sister Sierra filed paperwork to be appointed special administrator of her estate,
and that paperwork contained affidavits from Micah's siblings
documenting their knowledge
of the abusive relationship.
And that gave us a trail of breadcrumbs to follow that we are still on.
This move by Micah's family was unusual to us.
In a lot of cases, it takes grieving families weeks or months to get to a point where they
feel comfortable making accusations.
But Ciara's affidavit took the guesswork out of our story.
She told us all in so few words how her sister actually died by a thousand metaphorical cuts
rather than just a bullet of a nine millimeter. I know my sister to have expressed the abuse and violence against her by her
husband to others including family members and members of the church
congregation. Micah told me that there were people following her keeping track
of where she went. She thought that Mr. Miller hired people
to follow her.
Mr. Miller later confirmed this during a sermon I watched.
Micah confided in me that Mr. Miller was moving assets that were in his name, such as his
vehicle, changing the deed to their house, to the church, transferring interest in crocodile rocks
to one of his sons.
It's interesting how now we see that JP was talking
about moving assets before Micah's death,
which could have been in anticipation of the divorce
to hide assets from Micah.
But after JP's home
was raided by the FBI on Friday, everything looks different in this light.
In Ciara's affidavit, she cut straight through the noise surrounding her sister's case and
pointed the finger right at JP.
My sister also expressed to me that she was fearful that she would not make it to the divorce
and that her life would be taken from her. Micah stated to me on many occasions,
if I ended up with a bullet in my head it was not by me. It was JP. Micah forwarded a family group text message notifying us that Mr. Miller was served the
divorce papers on April 25, 2024.
On April 27, 2024, my sister, Micah A. Miller, was found dead as a result of a gunshot wound.
Let me repeat that.
Quote, If I end up dead with a bullet in my head, it was not by me, it was by JP.
Haunting, right? What are the odds that a woman would tell her sister
those words? In just two days after her husband JP was served divorce papers, she ended up
dead in a random park that was more than an hour away from her home.
Micah serving JP his divorce papers was one of many actions she had taken in the weeks
leading up to her death that might indicate she hadn't been planning to end her life,
but rather was trying to start a new one free of him.
She was working as a waitress at a place in Myrtle Beach called J. Peter's Grill and Bar.
She was living in an apartment with a roommate to save money and had shipped items to Kenya as she wanted to move there
eventually. Money was tight for Micah in the last few months of her life and those close to her were
baffled that the day before her death she had made a
$200 car payment for overdue taxes on her Honda.
her death, she had made a $200 car payment for overdue taxes on her Honda. Why go to all that trouble of paying car taxes and getting that far in her divorce if she was planning to end her life?
While details from the Robeson County Sheriff's Office investigation appeared to convince the
police that Micah died by suicide, we found enough holes for reasonable doubt to shine through the
narrative that Micah, and only Micah, was responsible for her death. Nearly two weeks after Micah's death on May 10th, the Robeson County Sheriff's Office released
details of their investigation that led them to declare that Micah died by suicide. Specifically,
they released a 31-page report that on its surface appeared to show a detailed investigation.
Police arrived at this conclusion
based on a few pieces of evidence.
One, the evidence that showed Micah purchasing
the weapon she was shot with,
and that was found near her hours before her death.
Two, the 911 call from Micah herself
an hour and a half before her time of death,
telling police that she wanted her family to know
where her body was because she was about to kill herself.
Three, the fact that Micah appeared to be by herself and that the most likely suspect
in this scenario, and any scenario when a woman is found dead, the husband, appeared
to be in another state.
Four, the fact that the medical examiner concluded this was suicide, which they seem to base
on medical records that we've since raised serious questions about.
Five, the fact that police and the medical examiner both received information, likely
from JP, that Micah had tried to kill herself before and had a history of mental illness.
Now, at first, I know that seemed like an open and shut case, but it didn't take us
long and every sleuth on the internet
long, to poke holes in this investigation. And it's important for us to go back to this as it's
clear a federal investigation that started around the time of Micah's death is undoubtedly heating
up and possibly heading toward arrest. First of all, the shell casings found 100 feet away
from Micah's body have never made any sense to us. The water levels where she was found were low
and it seemed unlikely to us that her body
could have moved that far in that short amount of time.
But again, why multiple casings?
I have a hard time believing that a person
who wanted to end her life would fire a test shot
off her gun in a public park near a fishing pier
at the risk of people hearing the gunshot
and disrupting the plan.
Second, Micah was dressed and on her way to work when she, for some unknown reason, changed
plans and ended up showing up at a pawn shop shortly after the start of her work shift
to purchase a handgun with money that her friends and family were surprised she had,
given her financial state at the time.
The 911 call is by far the strongest evidence to support police conclusions
that Micah's death was a suicide, but we all know that it's possible, though unlikely,
that AI could have been used for that phone call. Also interesting is that one of JP's
attorneys has bragged about his knowledge of AI technology on his website.
Now the third part is the most frustrating. Police, to our knowledge, had no concrete evidence
of J.P. Miller's whereabouts on the day of Micah's death.
We've read the two paragraphs that the Sheriff's Office
wrote about J.P. and his so-called alibi
more than 100 times, and we cannot overlook this.
The investigation also revealed that Miller
and her estranged husband, John Paul Miller,
had been separated and were involved in the legal system.
This information led to the investigators confirming the whereabouts of Miller and a
female that he is allegedly romantically involved with.
Investigators were able to confirm that both individuals were not in North Carolina on
the night before and the day of the Miller's death.
Investigators learned through interviews
that John Paul Miller was at an athletic event
in Charleston on the day of Micah Miller's death.
John Miller's vehicle was observed
traveling on Highway 17 bypass in Horry County at 2.22
p.m. on April 27, 2024. The investigation confirmed that John Paul Miller was accompanied
while traveling to and from the event in Charleston, South Carolina.
Okay, so we should note that the only sentence the Sheriff's Office decided to bold in
this entire press release was about exonerating JP Miller and his alleged girlfriend Susie
Skinner, which to us seemed like a clear indication that police were releasing this primarily
to exonerate JP.
The accompanying PowerPoint by the Robeson County Sheriff's Office said that JP was
in Charleston for a sporting event Friday night and that eyewitness statements placed
him in Charleston, which was about two hours away.
I have never understood why they bothered to rely on eyewitness statements of JP Miller
being in Charleston on the day before Micah's death.
Especially considering this man has access
to eight vehicles and a plane through his church.
Screenshots from traffic cameras
show that one of J.P. Miller's vehicles,
his truck, left Charleston County
around 1.30 p.m. that afternoon,
and it showed it going through the Myrtle Beach area around 2.20pm.
Police also mentioned that JP was accompanied by other individuals while traveling to and from Charleston.
But here is the thing, none of that matters. It is concerning that from the information that police decided to give us, nothing appeared
to show where JP Miller or his truck was located between 2.20pm and when Micah died around
4.30pm. There are no cell phone records, there are no witness statements. In fact, there has still been questions
about JP's whereabouts around that time.
And according to reporting from YouTuber, Robbie Harvey,
a neighbor of JP is certain they saw him
speeding through the neighborhood
when he was reportedly in Charleston or on his way back.
According to Robbie, there was also evidence
to show that JP had magnetic plates that adhere to your pickup
to change its appearance and color.
None of that, by the way, has been fully substantiated
beyond a comparison of photos and video of JP's truck
with its distinguishing stickers in the back window.
And, ugh, guys, this part drives me crazy.
And I hope that the FBI is also investigating Robeson County's investigation so that they
don't do this to another person.
The fact that police seemed to be convinced that JP had nothing to do with Micah's death based on information of his location in a time frame
that ultimately does not matter, that is either intentional gaslighting from the police,
aka the old good ol' boy move we know of muddying the waters to make it look deep,
or it is simply just incompetent investigators.
And that brings us to the medical examiner's failure in this case.
Which by the way, listen to episode 67-57 for a full report on that if you're really
feeling like getting angry today.
The four page medical report showed that the examiner ultimately based their conclusion
on Micah's past medical records. The fact that she was prescribed anti-anxiety medication at the time,
which was a mild one not associated with suicidal ideation, and the absence of the appearance of
any struggle where the casings were found. Also, there were two medical examiners.
The first one called up a second one because clearly,
this was not a cut and dry case from the start.
Ultimately, North Carolina authorities failed in this investigation
by deciding to not get an autopsy on Micah before
J.P. Miller cremated her body. I am worried that if the FBI investigation involves Micah's death,
this decision by the medical examiner's office is going to hurt the case. An autopsy could have
cleared up a lot of questions in the investigation.
Oh, and the toxicology that was done on Micah was also strange.
It appears that the medical examiner's office did not collect her blood to be able to conduct
a test.
Instead, fluid from her eyes was extracted at an organ donation lab, which made us think, did they forget to do a toxicology
at first? The toxicology report only tested a few things. Interestingly enough, THC components
were not among them, when in the same report, the medical examiner blamed Delta-8 and THC use as if it were evidence of Micah's
mental demise.
That made us wonder if JP fed them information that they didn't vet.
Perhaps most importantly, the medical examiner's report mentioned Micah's anxiety, like it
was a bad thing that led to her suicide, but they did not know anything about what
would be causing this woman's anxiety.
Like for instance, a long history of reported harassment and stalking from her pastor husband
who she was desperately trying to leave.
The one who was served divorce papers just two days before her body was found.
The fact that it wasn't even mentioned
as a possible circumstance surrounding her death
felt ultimately like a deep injustice to Micah
in a grossly mishandled investigation
that somehow tipped off the FBI
and eventually led them to JP's home on Friday.
and eventually led them to JP's home on Friday.
And this is why this FBI raid is such a big deal. Not only does it make us happy to know
that we've been right on the money this entire time,
and not only is it yet another sign that we and all women
should trust our guts when it comes to things
that don't seem right.
It's pretty much the first time where we can say
that on this day, someone with power did something for Micah.
We just wish this had happened
before it was too late for her.
Now you think this much drama would cause a man to lay low,
right?
You see your house getting tossed on national news,
it might be a cause to not create, you know,
any more news about yourself.
Not with JP Miller, y'all. Last week, we told you about how he had registered the existence
of another church with the State Secretary of State's office, Living Water Ministries,
that's the new name. Is Solid Rock changing its name? It depends on how you look at it.
This definitely appears to be an attempt at rebranding. It's not quite a name change,
though, because Solid Rock still exists as be an attempt at rebranding. It's not quite a name change though,
because Solid Rocks still exists as an entity, at least on paper. But now, it's reportedly closed.
Closed. Done. No more. This past Sunday appears to have been its last service, and JP was, according
to YouTuber Robbie Harvey, not in attendance. He's still a registered agent for the church though,
which is why it was interesting to see on Tuesday that substantial items were being taken from the
church.
According to Robby Harvey, several former elders of Solid Rock told him that JP was
allegedly giving everything away and had told them to come get what they wanted. Pictures
posted by Robby showed rubber-made containers on the sidewalk and a man who appears to be JP's mentor and cleaner-upper Charles Randall loading them into his vehicle.
We're going to do a deeper dive on this in the future because there are so many questions
about the church's assets and what happens to them now.
We'll say it again.
Both Micah and JP's ex-wife Allison have said that the line between JP's finances
and the church's
finances was blurred.
Months ago, Robbie Harvey reported that he had evidence that JP had instructed his right-hand
woman, Trisha Ross, to use the church's benevolence fund to pay someone who was assisting
JP with digging up so-called dirt on reporters and content creators who were covering this
case.
Doesn't seem like a church expensed us, but we're not CPAs, so who knows?
But there are very serious questions to be asking about whatever it is that JP has planned
with this new church and how it might intersect with his now closed church, which was built
off the backs of its church members and their hard-earned paychecks.
I'm sure some of you are
wondering why JP would be allowed to give away the church's possessions like this when he's
clearly under investigation by the FBI, when they're clearly on the hunt for evidence against him.
As Beth said earlier in the episode, the church was not part of the FBI raid. We think it should
have been given the blurred lines between JP and the church.
Whatever abuse he may be accused of was alleged abuse that would have occurred at and through the
church as well. No? We all know that Micah's law outlined examples of that alleged abuse, including
JP allegedly using Micah's job at the church as a point of power over her, firing her and then
hiring her back on a whim. The church even pressed charges against Micah during the height of her relationship problems
with JP when she was trying to divorce him, accusing her of stealing from them.
We've always maintained that this was something that appeared to be used as leverage against
Micah.
As you know, a judge refused to sign a warrant for the case because he said there was no
evidence of wrongdoing.
So why didn't the FBI search the church as well?
What does it mean now that there's evidence that items are being removed from it?
Could JP be charged with tampering with an investigation?
It's hard to know the answer to that because we don't know what the FBI was looking for
or what JP and his attorneys were told by the FBI.
If anything, about whether it was okay to do something like this.
The other thing we know is that JP doesn't have any outstanding civil claims against
him.
So as far as any accusation of him wasting assets here, that wouldn't apply.
And the FBI didn't search the church, which is either an oversight on their part or an
indication that they did not believe there was anything that would be helpful to their
investigation into JP there.
As for what comes next here, if the FBI found what they were
looking for during the raid, it is not unreasonable to suspect that an indictment would be coming up
soon. According to sources with knowledge of the investigation and an interview that Micah's attorney Regina B Ward did on law and crime,
the FBI did not go into this raid empty-handed.
They already had a lot of potential evidence in their hands.
This is just the beginning of what we hope is finally justice for Micah.
So stay tuned, stay pesky, and stay in the sunlight.
True Sunlight is a Lunashark production created by me, Manny Matney, and co-hosted by journalist
Liz Farrell. Learn more about our mission and membership at lunasharkmedia.com.
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