In the aftermath, Miller was discharged from hospital and taken to the Clark County detention center, where he was charged with dangerous flying.
He later pleaded guilty to a charge of misdemeanour trespassing and spent eight days in jail.
As part of the deal, this sentence coincided with Holyfield’s next fight against Michael Moorer, preventing him from repeating the feat.
Fan Man made headlines worldwide and became an overnight sensation. He was even later recreated in an episode of The Simpsons when the show was at its cultural peak.
Regardless, the kooky character chose not to buy into the limelight and never truly revealed his motives.
Miller turned up for one brief and bizarre press conference following the fight, with The Sun’s Colin Hart among those in attendance.
He gave a few short answers, inexplicably claimed the whole thing was an accident and left reporters bewildered as he then powered up his paramotor and ‘flew off in the direction of the mountains’.
Miller later changed his story about the incident being accidental and said he’d instead crashed the event because he didn’t like violence and wanted to stop the two men fighting.
This would not be the last time he did so.
Miller was arrested early in 1994 after flying over the Los Angeles Coliseum during the NFL play-off between the LA Raiders and Denver Broncos.
Fan Man then came to England and flew low over an Arsenal vs Bolton FA Cup tie the next month.
He escaped police on that occasion, but was arrested a week later for landing on top of Buckingham Palace.
Miller stripped naked to reveal his lower half was painted green, with fluorescent paint on his private area.
Thankfully, Queen Elizabeth II was not home at the time.
Fan Man appeared before Bow Street magistrates facing six charges of violating public order and air regulations.
He was given the option of either accepting a £200 fine for each of his offences or serving seven days in jail.
He naively opted for the prison sentence and was then deported back to the US.
At this stage, his story began to take a horribly sad turn.
Fan Man struggled to find work owing to the stigma of his multiple convictions and quirky reputation.
Miller was branded ‘five pence short of a shilling’ by Scotland Yard and known as a ‘weirdie’ by people back home in Nevada. He even received death threats from some fans furious with his interruptions at sporting events.
He chose to move away from it all in 1996, heading to Valdez, Alaska, where he lived in a hut that had no indoor plumbing, ran a computer business and gave flying lessons.
Over the next decade, he suffered from illnesses as a result of worry and stress, but had little money for health care.
Eventually, existing heart problems intensified and he underwent hugely expensive double heart-bypass surgery, which forced him to give up paragliding.
With his true passion lost and his pregnant girlfriend about to be laboured with the financial worries of his medical bills, Miller chose to commit suicide.
True to form, the bizarre circumstances in which he enacted his death saw Fan Man evoke confusion once again.
In 2002, aged 38, Miller disappeared into the Alaskan wilderness.
He was declared missing at the time his son was born and it was not until several months later that deer hunters discovered his decomposing remains on a route called Resurrection Pass.
Fan Man hanged himself by the strings of his parachute.
It appears this eternally mysterious end was what Fan Man intended, but pure fluke denied him.
Regardless of his tragic conclusion, James ‘Fan Man’ Miller’s legacy will live on in boxing as he provided the sport with one of it’s purest moments of beautiful insanity.
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