Former Scientologist Leah Remini’s concern for church leader David Miscavige’s wife, Shelly — who hasn’t been seen in public in almost seven years — is groundless, according to the LAPD. On Wednesday, it was reported the “King of Queens” star, who fled the church last month, had filed a missing person report for Shelly with the police. But yesterday, Officer Gregory Baek told Page Six, “The case is closed and nothing found.” Police insist the missing persons complaint was “unfounded,” but would not confirm the whereabouts of Shelly Miscavige. Sources say Remini had been threatening to call the cops for years over “unanswered questions” about Shelly’s disappearance. Former Sea Org member Mike Rinder reported that during Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes’ 2006 wedding, Remini was rebuked for asking where Shelly was, and was told by the church’s Tommy Davis, “You don’t have the [bleeping] rank to ask.” Sources say Remini was subjected to years of “interrogations” and “thought modification” for questioning Miscavige’s rule. A source recently told Page Six, “When you ask a question, like, ‘Where is Shelly?,’ you are immediately hauled in, interrogated and asked, ‘Why are you asking, who are you connected to, are you going on the Internet?’ ” Blogger Tony Ortega has said, “Shelly has not been seen [in public] since 2006, except for one sighting when she was allowed to attend the funeral of her father . . . Remini dared to ask about it.” The church has previously insisted that Shelly isn’t missing. Before the police closed the case, there were theories she was being held at a Scientology compound. “The Los Angeles Police Department has already stated that the case is closed and that the report filed by Leah Remini was unfounded,” the church said in a statement. “This ill-advised, ludicrous self-promotion and the media inquiries it generated caused an inexcusable distraction for the LAPD in an era when the time and resources of its officers are stretched thin each day. Creating this unnecessary burden for law enforcement was even more irresponsible given the entire episode was nothing more than a publicity stunt for Ms. Remini, cooked up with unemployed anti-religious zealots, such as Mike Rinder and Tony Ortega, who blog on the fringe of the Internet. Sadly, rather than move on with her life and career, Ms. Remini has aligned herself with a handful of untrustworthy, lunatic tabloid sources who obsessively harass the Church to advance their selfish agendas.