James Miller (parachutist)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

James Jarrett Miller also known as Fan Man (October 28, 19632002) was a parachutist and paraglider pilot from Henderson, Nevada, known for his outrageous appearances at various sporting events. His most famous appearance was during a 1993 boxing match between Evander Holyfield and Riddick Bowe at Caesar's Palace in Las Vegas, Nevada. Fan Man made headlines in the USA when he used his Powered paraglider, to fly into the arena, eventually crashing into the ring.

Contents

[edit] Background

Born in Havre de Grace, Maryland, Miller was an avid outdoorsman, a computer technician, a small business owner and an extreme sports enthusiast who enjoyed power paragliding. He was introduced to paragliders while living in Las Vegas.[1]

He started with a jetpack tied to his back and moved up to three-cycle aircraft engines that powered him through the skies above the desert. He began setting power-gliding records for altitude and distance. He also obtained a reputation for reckless daring.

After his publicized stunts, the Federal Aviation Administration threatened Miller with a lengthy sentence in a federal prison if he performed any more stunts.

Miller relocated to Valdez, Alaska where he continued to fly ultralight aircraft and paragliders in the Alaskan wilderness until he developed heart problems. He was diagnosed with a serious coronary condition, had heart surgery, and was forced to close his small computer business in Valdez in order to move to Anchorage, where he was closer to medical care and friends and family.

Miller was reported missing on September 22, 2002. On March 9, 2003, a group of hunters bushwhacking through the woods on the Kenai Peninsula found a decomposing body identified as that of James Miller. Miller had hanged himself from a tree, and the death was ruled a suicide.[2]

Although Miller's disappearance and death were reported in the local press, his suicide did not become widely known outside Alaska until later in 2003, when ESPN went searching for him to film a Sportscenter feature to be shown during the tenth anniversary of his stunt.

[edit] The Fan Man Fight

Miller's first and most famous stunt happened during the 1993 heavyweight title fight between Riddick Bowe and Evander Holyfield. Miller descended into the second minute of the seventh round of the fight, after circling Caesar’s Palace for 25 minutes. The lines of his paraglider tangled in the overhead lights as he came down into the ring wearing a white crash helmet. When he hit the canvas, one of his legs got caught in the top rope of the ring. Fans dragged him to the ground and beat him. One security officer struck Miller 20 times. He was rushed to a nearby hospital as spectators cut his paraglider into pieces for souvenirs. After his release from the hospital, Miller was taken to the Clark County Detention Center, where he was charged with dangerous flying and released on $200 bail.

"It was a heavyweight fight," Miller would joke later, "and I was the only guy who got knocked out."

The media immediately dubbed Miller "Fan Man," for the paramotor (lightweight engine and propellor) attached to his harness.

Fox Sports Net ranked this incident as the #1 "Most Outrageous Sports Moment".

[edit] Other stunts

In January 1994, Miller flew into a Denver Broncos-Los Angeles Raiders football game at the Coliseum in Los Angeles and was chased by National Guard helicopters. He was arrested for interfering with a sporting event.

In February 1994, he skydived into the middle of a soccer match in Bolton, England.

A few weeks after the World Cup stunt, Miller used a powered paraglider to get on top of Buckingham Palace after painting himself green and covering his private parts with glow-in-the-dark paint. British authorities evacuated the palace in seven minutes, then came for Miller, who was arrested on the roof. They charged him with terrorism, believing he had connections with the Irish Republican Army.

"What was funny was I was trying to make a point to the Irish that they didn’t need to use violence to protest British policies," Miller told Valdez newspapers years later.

British authorities interrogated Miller in an effort to learn who had helped him. He was threatened with a life sentence but refused to rat out his friends.

Less than a year after his Fan Man crusade began, Miller was convicted in Great Britain of "flying without a ticket of air worthiness," fined 600 pounds ($1,500), held in prison for 42 days, branded an international terrorist by Interpol and banished from the United Kingdom for life.

"When the judge said I was deported for life, I asked if my ashes could be buried in England," Miller told a Valdez newspaper. "The judge just looked at me and said, ‘no.’"

[edit] Death

Miller committed suicide in the Alaska wilderness, after having suffered for some time from a debilitating heart disease and further burdened with medical bills. [3] Miller hanged himself from a tree. Police said he had chosen the remote Resurrection Trail in Chugach National Forest, veering deep off-trail to a spot that might not have been discovered for years, if ever.

[edit] Trivia

Miller's Fan Man escapade was parodied in an episode of The Simpsons, entitled The Homer They Fall in which Homer starts a boxing career and had a match attended by "Fan Man," who arrived at his ringside seat in his paraglider. During the fight, Homer's manager Moe stole "Fan Man's" harness and rescued Homer from the final punch. The episode closed with scenes of Moe as "Fan Man" doing good to make up for his sleazy role in Homer's boxing career.

[edit] References

  1. ^ "Obituary", Anchorage Daily News, 2003-03-21.
  2. ^ Tizon, Tomas Alex (2005-03-06). Alaska: the land of the lost (http). Los Angeles Times. Retrieved on 2006-11-28.
  3. ^ http://www.fightnews.com/fightnews462.htm

[edit] External links