FEMA official claims he teleported to Waffle House
· UPIApril 3 (UPI) -- An official in the Federal Emergency Management Agency reiterated on Friday that he has experienced teleportation multiple times, including to a Waffle House miles away from where he had been.
Gregg Phillips, associate administrator for FEMA's Office of Response and Recovery, posted on social media and repeated statements that he has teleported, that it really happened and that it is connected his religious beliefs, CNN and The New York Times reported.
Phillips had mentioned his history of teleportation on several podcasts, including one called "Onward," in which he said that "teleporting is no fun."
"God will not be mocked," Phillips posted on Truth Social. "People can debate me. Question me. Even ridicule what they don't understand."
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"But here's the real question," he wrote. "What's harder to believe? That God could move in a moment during a spiritual battle, or Jesus Christ rose from the dead and is coming again? I know what I've experienced. I know Who I serve."
The social media post comes after a previous CNN report about Phillips' comment on a podcast that he had experienced teleportation multiple times.
The examples included that his car was once flown through the air to a church and that he was teleported to a location of Waffle House in Rome, Ga., People Magazine reported.
"I was with my boys one time and I was telling them I was gonna go to Waffle House and get Waffle House," Phillips said on a podcast in 2025.
"I ended up at a Waffle House -- this was in Georgia -- and I end at a Waffle House like 50 miles away," he said.
The Times reported that employees at three Waffle House locations within 50 miles of where Phillips was remember seeing him.
Phillips said this week that the comments were taken out of context.
Earlier this week, in another post on Truth Social, he said that "the word 'teleportation' was not mine" and that his comments had been taken out of context while he while discussing treatment for metastatic bone cancer that had spread from his prostate.
The podcast episode, he said, was conducted during the "opening days of intensive treatment, heavily medicated, not thinking about future headlines."
"The word 'teleportation' was not mine. It was used by someone else in the conversation reaching for language to describe something with no easy name," he wrote. "The more accurate biblical terms are 'translated' or 'transported' -- not new ideas for people of faith."
The Times, CNN and MSNOW also reported that Phillips has a history of spreading baseless conspiracy theories -- including election fraud and the discredited "2000 mules" project -- and has employed violent rhetoric about politicians and public officials with whom he disagrees.
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