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NFL Senior Vice President of Security Jeffrey Miller calls on a reporter for a question during a news conference on security for Super Bowl activities Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2016, in San Francisco. The Denver Broncos will play the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50 Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)
NFL Senior Vice President of Security Jeffrey Miller calls on a reporter for a question during a news conference on security for Super Bowl activities Wednesday, Feb. 3, 2016, in San Francisco. The Denver Broncos will play the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl 50 Sunday, Feb. 7, 2016. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip)David J. Phillip/Associated Press

Jeffrey Miller, NFL VP of Security, Resigns: Latest Details and Reaction

Adam WellsMay 4, 2016

NFL Vice President of Security Jeffrey Miller has resigned from the job after nine years. 

Mike Florio of Pro Football Talk reported Wednesday that the NFL confirmed Miller's departure, with one source telling Florio it had "nothing to do with performance" and "wasn’t initiated by the league."

The report noted NFL spokesman Brian McCarthy said Miller had taken another job on the West Coast, and according to Florio, citing a source, the league has not yet decided who will succeed him. 

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Miller came under criticism during the Ray Rice scandal in which the former Baltimore Ravens running back punched his then-fiancee in an Atlantic City elevator.

Robert Mueller released his investigation into the case in January 2015 and "found no evidence or suggestion that anyone within the league had received or seen the in-elevator video prior to its public release in September 2014."

However, three months before that report, a law enforcement official told the Associated Press (via ESPN.com) a video of the incident was sent to NFL headquarters "to the attention of league security chief Jeffrey Miller in April."

Prior to joining the NFL, Miller served as state police commissioner in Pennsylvania from 2003-08. 

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