HORRY COUNTY, S.C. (WBTW) — Mica Miller’s family — who helped inspire a statewide coercive control bill — is hopeful after a second one was recently pre-filed.
Police say Mica died by suicide in April 2024 at Lumber River State Park in Robeson County, North Carolina. Soon after, allegations from friends and family of hers surfaced accusing her husband at the time, Myrtle Beach pastor John-Paul Miller of coercive control gaining national attention.
For domestic violence victims and survivors, abuse isn’t just physical. It can show up as isolation, constant threats, frequent name calling or constantly monitoring someone. For Mica her family says she experienced all of this but was not protected by the law…