Las Vegas police have arrested a local volleyball coach on multiple charges related to sexually based crimes involving minors, and investigators are now urging any additional victims to come forward.
Levi Miller, 26, was taken into custody by detectives from the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department’s Sexual Assault Detail on June 9, 2026.
He was subsequently booked into the Clark County Detention Center, where he remains facing a serious list of charges, including sexual assault with a child under 16 years of age, three counts of lewdness committed by a person over 18 with a child aged 14 or 15, child abuse or neglect, and battery by strangulation.
Miller had been working as a coach with the Vegas United Volleyball Club before his arrest. Once club leadership learned of the allegations, they moved quickly to cut ties with him. In a statement released shortly after news of the arrest broke, the organization confirmed it had relieved Miller of all duties and associations with the club.
Investigators Believe Other Victims May Exist
LVMPD detectives are not treating this as an isolated case. Investigators believe there are likely additional juvenile victims who have not yet come forward, and they are actively encouraging anyone with relevant information to reach out. The Sexual Assault Detail can be contacted directly at 702-828-3421.
For those who wish to remain anonymous, Crime Stoppers is available by phone at 702-385-5555 or online at CrimeStoppersofNV.com.
The arrest of Miller comes during what has been a troubling stretch of similar cases in the Las Vegas valley. In recent months, law enforcement has also arrested Frank Mariani, a football coach at Boulder City High School, on charges related to lewd acts with minor children.
Former Las Vegas soccer coach Sergio Reyes Rojas agreed to plead guilty to multiple charges stemming from a separate investigation. Pernell Graham, an assistant principal at a local charter school, was also arrested following accusations of repeated abuse of students in his care.
The pattern of arrests involving adults in trusted positions of authority over young people has drawn significant attention from the community and raised broader questions about screening and oversight processes within youth sports organizations and schools throughout Clark County.
For parents and guardians of young athletes in the Las Vegas area, law enforcement officials have consistently stressed the importance of open communication with children about their experiences with coaches and authority figures.
If a child mentions anything that feels uncomfortable or inappropriate about their interactions with an adult in a coaching role, experts advise taking those concerns seriously and reporting them to the police immediately rather than waiting for more information.
Anyone with knowledge of Miller or the ongoing investigation is strongly encouraged to contact LVMPD’s Sexual Assault Detail or reach out through Crime Stoppers to help detectives build a complete picture of what occurred.