On 22 September 1937, former Tsarist officer,
All-Military Union counter-intelligence chief, and
NKVD mole,
Nikolai Skoblin led Miller to a Paris
safe house, ostensibly to meet with two German
Abwehr agents, who were in fact officers of the Soviet NKVD disguised as German military intelligence operatives. They drugged Miller, locked him inside a steamer trunk, and smuggled him aboard a Soviet ship in
Le Havre. Miller, however, had left behind a note to be opened in case he failed to return from the meeting. In it, he detailed his mounting suspicions about Skoblin. French police launched a massive manhunt, but Skoblin fled to the Soviet embassy in Paris and eventually was smuggled to
Barcelona, where the
Second Spanish Republic refused to extradite him to the
Third French Republic. However, the French police arrested Skoblin's wife,
Nadezhda Plevitskaya. A French court convicted her of
kidnapping and sentenced her to 20 years in prison. Plevitskaya died in prison in 1940. The NKVD successfully smuggled Miller back to
Moscow, where he was tortured and summarily shot nineteen months later on 11 May 1939, at the age 71. NKVD agent
Pavel Sudoplatov later claimed that "[Miller's] kidnapping was a
cause célèbre. Eliminating him disrupted his organization of Tsarist officers and effectively prevented them from collaborating with the Germans against us." Sudoplatov also claimed that Western accounts of NKVD agent
Leonid Eitingon having played a role in the abduction of Miller are false. Copies of letters written by Miller while imprisoned in Moscow are in the
Dmitri Volkogonov papers at the
Library of Congress. ==See also==