Months After Mica Miller's Death, FBI Raids Pastor Husband's Home
Local authorities told PEOPLE in May that the FBI was conducting a "parallel investigation" into John-Paul Miller after Mica Miller's death was ruled a suicide
The FBI searched the home of John-Paul Miller, the South Carolina pastor whose wife, Mica, died by suicide in April.
A spokesperson for the FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment from PEOPLE, but WBTW, WPDE and The Sun News all reported that agents were seen outside John-Paul Miller’s home in Horry County, S.C.
Both WPDE and WBTW both reported that an FBI spokesperson said the agency was conducting "court-authorized law enforcement activity" at the home.
Miller’s lawyer, Russell Long, confirmed that the FBI searched the house in a statement to PEOPLE.
“They executed a search warrant at his house this morning, as expected,” Long said. “Nothing new really. Hopefully this is the end of it.”
Related: Local Sheriff's Office Claims FBI Has Launched 'Parallel Investigation' After Suicide of Mica Miller
Mica Miller, 30, was found dead in a state park in Robeson County, N.C., from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to local authorities.
Mica and John-Paul, who is the pastor at Solid Rock at Market Common in Myrtle Beach, were estranged at the time of her death. Just over a week before she died, Mica filed for Separate Support and Maintenance against John-Paul, which is the same as a legal separation, the Horry County Clerk of Court’s Office told PEOPLE.
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Mica's loved ones have speculated that there could have been foul play involved in her death, but local authorities have adamantly pushed back, saying evidence of a suicide was “clear and convincing."
The search of John-Paul’s Horry County home comes months after the Robeson County Sheriff’s Office told PEOPLE in May that the FBI was conducting a “parallel investigation” that was not involved with Mica’s death.
"There's no evidence connecting him to her death," Damien McLean of the Robeson County Sheriff's Office told PEOPLE in May. "[The FBI is] investigating separate from her death. Her death has been ruled [a] suicide."
The FBI has not said what the nature of the investigation is.
• Wendy Grossman Kantor contributed reporting