Ezra Miller, star of Warner Bros.' The Flash, has reportedly spent months driving around the United States, armed and wearing a bulletproof vest, believing they are being followed by the FBI and the Ku Klux Klan.To get more news about camouflage bulletproof vest, you can visit bulletproofboxs.com official website.

The report, by Business Insider, is only the latest in a series of escalating accounts of the actor's alarming behavior, which includes a pair of arrests, accusations of threats, long-term manipulation of a teen and endangering children, and concerns that Miller effectively turned an Iceland Airbnb into a cult-like commune.According to Insider, "several people" close to Miller fear the 29-year-old Fantastic Beasts actor has lost touch with reality. "I think Ezra has been enabled because of their fame, their wealth, their earning potential, their whiteness, and their beauty," a longtime family friend told the outlet. "It's really hard to intervene when someone has as many resources as Ezra," they added. "When you're famous, people are less likely to say 'no' to you. I think that those things can be really dangerous."
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Miller reportedly experienced "frequent meltdowns" while filming The Flash that didn't involve violent outbursts, but instead were described as self-critical behavior. However, the actor's alleged behavior off-set has been menacing, with physical confrontations and accusations of threats and grooming.

In January, Miller uploaded a cryptic video warning "the Beulaville chapter of the North Carolina Ku Klux Klan" to kill themselves, or else, "we'll do it for you, if that's really what you want." That would appear to be an early indication of the actor's KKK fixation.

Miller's erratic behavior has jeopardized the actor's professional future, with Warner Bros. executives reportedly deciding to cut ties following the June 2023 release of The Flash. Recent rumors that the film had been removed from the studio's calendar were dismissed this week by both a producer and by Warner Bros. Discovery CEO David Zazlav.Miller made a splash with their 2008 film debut, the acclaimed drama Afterschool, which was followed by the 2011 psychological thriller We Need to Talk About Kevin, the 2012 coming-of-age drama The Perks of Being a Wallflower, and the 2015 docudrama The Stanford Prison Experiment. Miller's casting as Barry Allen in 2016's Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice marked the actor's move into mainstream, big-budget features that continued with Justice League, the Fantastic Beasts series, now, The Flash.