The FAA confirmed that two separate flight crews spotted the mysterious jetpack flyer.

Guy in a Jetpack

An American Airlines pilot says that a man wearing a jetpack flew past him as he prepared to land at Los Angeles International Airport on Sunday evening, the local station ABC 7 News reports.

"Tower, American 1997, we just passed a guy in a jetpack," the bewildered pilot told LA's tower, noting they were at about 3,000 feet at the time of the sighting. "Off the left side, maybe 300 yards or so, about our altitude."

Two separate flight crews spotted the jetpack, as the Federal Aviation Administration confirmed to local news station Fox 11.

"We just saw the guy passing us by in a jetpack," the second pilot flying a Jet Blue airliner confirmed. "Only in LA."

Wrong Place, Wrong Time

Aviation safety expert Steve Cowell told Fox 11 that "it's possible this person may have come up, come down, and then driven away," as current jetpacks don't allow for prolonged flight.

Security experts warned that in a worst case scenario, a jetpack-wearing person could easily be sucked into the jet engines. That means passengers could also be at risk, as such a collision would cause significant damage to the plane's engines.

It's still entirely unclear what's behind the mystery. The FAA is now putting the investigation into the hands of the LA police department.

READ MORE: Pilot landing at LAX reports 'guy in a jetpack' flying near plane [ABC 7]

More on jetpacks: Watch a Real-Life “Iron Man” Take Off From the Ground Like a Badass


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