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FBI Investigates Pilot’s Report ‘Of Guy In Jet pack’ Flying 3,000 Feet In Air Near LAX

Chile, a lot of strange thangs have happened in 2020. As we start September, it just became stranger. According to reports, an American Airlines pilot claimed he saw a man flying with a jet pack on Sunday night, near Los Angeles International Airport.

When calling air-traffic-control, the conversation reportedly went like this:

“Tower, American 1997 — we just passed a guy in a jet pack,” the pilot of American Airlines Flight 1997 from Philadelphia told air traffic control, about 6:35 p.m. Sunday. The exchange was captured and posted by LiveATC.net, which shares live and archived recordings of air-traffic-control radio transmissions.

“Were they off to your left side or right side?” the controller asked. The pilot said the person was 300 yards to the plane’s left, and about 30 seconds later, another pilot said he had also seen the man pass by. The controller, after asking the pilot of JetBlue Flight 23 to keep a lookout, added, “Only in L.A.”

American Airlines declined to identify the pilot, referring inquiries to the F.A.A. A JetBlue official would not comment, according to The New York Times. As expected, authorities are investigating. “The FBI is aware of the reports by pilots on Sunday and is working to determine what occurred,” a spokesperson told FOX 11 on Tuesday.

Earlier this year, the Pentagon finally released videos of UFO sightings. According to CNN, the Pentagon released three short videos showing “unidentified aerial phenomena,” which were previously released by a private company, back in 2017.

In an interview with CNN, one of the pilots stated that he had never seen anything like it before.

“As I got close to it … it rapidly accelerated to the south, and disappeared in less than two seconds,” said retired US Navy pilot David Fravor. “This was extremely abrupt, like a ping pong ball, bouncing off a wall. It would hit and go the other way.”

The release of the videos comes after the Navy acknowledged their accuracy in September of 2019. They’re officially released now “in order to clear up any misconceptions by the public on whether or not the footage that has been circulating was real, or whether or not there is more to the videos,” according to Pentagon spokesperson Sue Gough.

Not to mention COVID-19 and the impact it has on the world. Ooohhhwwweee, 2020 is undefeated.

 

LaJanee