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The Man in Charge of Federal Disaster Response Says He Has Been Teleported. Multiple Times.

Gregg Phillips, head of FEMA's Office of Response and Recovery, confirms the Waffle House incident was real. No Waffle House employees confirm this.

By Rex Holloway · April 19, 2026

The Man in Charge of Federal Disaster Response Says He Has Been Teleported. Multiple Times.

WASHINGTON — The official responsible for coordinating the United States government's response to major disasters has stated publicly, on multiple recorded occasions, that he has been involuntarily teleported against his will — including once to a Waffle House in Rome, Georgia, approximately 50 miles from where he had just been standing.

Gregg Phillips, Director of the Office of Response and Recovery at the Federal Emergency Management Agency, made the claims across several podcast appearances in recent weeks. He has not walked them back. When given the opportunity to clarify, he doubled down. When called a liar, he said, and we are quoting directly: "Haters gonna hate."

"Teleporting is no fun," Phillips said in one recording. "It's no fun because you don't really know what you're doing. You don't really understand it, it's scary, but yet so real. And you know it's happening but you can't do anything about it, and so you just go, you just go with the ride."

Investigators have not ruled out all possible modes of arrival.

Investigators have not ruled out all possible modes of arrival.

According to Phillips, the Waffle House incident unfolded as follows: he was with friends at a location in Georgia. He then was not. He was instead at a Waffle House in Rome, Georgia. His friends, confused by his absence, contacted him. He told them where he was. They told him that was not possible. He told them it was possible. It was real.

A reporter subsequently visited three Waffle House locations within 50 miles of the reported origin point. No employees at any of the three locations recalled seeing Gregg Phillips. No employees recalled a teleportation event of any kind. One employee said she had worked the overnight shift for eleven years and that nothing like that had ever happened. She seemed confident.

The Waffle House incident is not the only teleportation Phillips has reported. In a separate account, he described his car being physically lifted from the road and deposited, along with him inside it, approximately 40 miles away near a ditch beside a church. He did not explain the condition of the car upon arrival. He did not explain what he told his insurance company.

When the story attracted widespread attention, FEMA issued a statement describing Phillips' comments as "personal, informal, jovial, and somewhat spiritual discussions" made in the context of his treatment for metastatic bone cancer. Phillips himself clarified that the word "teleportation" was not originally his — that someone else in the conversation had reached for it to describe "something with no easy name." He said the more accurate biblical terms were "translated" or "transported."

He is still in charge of federal disaster response.

President Trump, asked about the matter at a press availability last week, responded: "What does teleport mean?" A reporter explained what teleporting means. The President listened. He did not answer the original question. He moved on to a different topic.

Phillips was appointed to his current role following his prominent work on the 2022 film *2000 Mules*, which alleged widespread coordinated voter fraud in the 2020 presidential election. The film's central claims were subsequently discredited by multiple independent fact-checkers, election officials in both parties, and the film's own data provider, who said the conclusions drawn from his data were wrong.

That film did not involve teleportation.

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What They Left Out

In a follow-up statement provided to this publication, a spokesperson for FEMA reiterated that Phillips' teleportation comments should be understood in the context of his cancer journey and personal faith.

We asked whether a person who believes he has been physically transported through space by a supernatural force was the right person to manage the federal government's logistical response to hurricanes, wildfires, and floods.

The spokesperson did not answer that question.

We asked again.

The spokesperson said the agency had no further comment.

Gregg Phillips has not been reached for additional comment. He may be difficult to locate.

And now you know... what they left out.

What They Left Out

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