You're
still legally dead, judge tells Fostoria
man
By RYAN DUNN
Staff writer
Donald Eugene Miller Jr. walked out of
Hancock County Probate Court on Monday as legally dead as ever.
In 1994, the court ruled that Miller was legally dead, eight
years after he disappeared from his Arcadia rental home.
The same judge, Allan Davis, ruled Monday that Miller is still
dead, in the eyes of the law. Miller's request for a reversal came well
after the three-year legal limit for changing a death ruling, Davis said.
Miller, 61, now of Fostoria, spoke softly in court and offered
few details about his past.
Miller said he was an alcoholic who was unsure what
to do after losing his job.
"My paycheck was being taken away from me and I had
nothing left," he said.
"It kind of went further than I ever expected it to,"
Miller said. "I just kind of took off, ended up in different places,"
he said.
He said he briefly worked odd jobs in
Atlanta and Marathon, Fla., after leaving Hancock County sometime before 1990.
His parents informed him of his "death" upon
his return to Ohio in about 2005, he said.
Miller told Judge
Davis he neither sought alcohol treatment nor contacted his children in the
time after he left.
Miller said he would like to
start his life again, or "whatever's left of it." He asked the court to
reverse its 1994 death
ruling so he can reinstate his canceled Social Security number and driver's
license.
The court said no.
Miller may still be able to challenge the Social
Security Administration in federal court. However, his attorney, Francis
Marley, said Miller does not have the resources to do so.
"My client's here on a wing and a prayer today," Marley
said.
Miller's ex-wife, Robin Miller, had asked for the
death ruling so Social Security death benefits could be
paid to their two
children.
Donald Miller was last reported in
Arcadia around 1986 and was
declared dead in 1994, she has said.
Robin Miller declined
to testify on Monday.

She
said after the court hearing that Donald Miller left the state with
hefty child support bills. He was scared of a jail term, she said.
He owed about $26,000 in overdue child support
by 1994, she has said.
Robin Miller opposed his request for a change in the death
ruling, because she does not want to repay the Social Security
benefits. She does not have the money, she said.
Robin Miller said it would be fine if his Social Security
number was reinstated. She said she sympathizes with him, but points
to his decisions.
Judge Davis referred to Donald Miller's case as a "strange,
strange situation."
"We've got the obvious here. A man sitting in the
courtroom, he appears to be in good health," Davis said.
Miller made a decision to leave the state to avoid
paying child support, Davis said.
But the three-year time limit on the death ruling is clear,
Davis said.
"I don't know where that leaves you, but you're still
deceased as far as the law is concerned," Davis said.
Subscribe to The Courier.
Wreckless Eric: The Final Taxi (Link)

