Representative Anna Paulina Luna, Republican of Florida, reportedly suggested this week that members of Congress have encountered credible evidence pointing to the existence of what she described as “interdimensional beings” — entities capable of operating outside the normal boundaries of time and space.
Speaking during a Wednesday episode of The Joe Rogan Experience, Luna said her statements were based not on speculation but on information and testimony she has reviewed in her role as a lawmaker.
“I think that they can actually operate through the time spaces that we currently have,” she told Rogan. “And that’s not something that I came up with on my own. That’s based on stuff that we’ve seen. That’s based on information that we’ve been told.”
Her remarks come amid renewed bipartisan interest in unexplained aerial and technological phenomena, as well as growing calls for transparency from the federal government.
In February, Luna and Representative James Comer, Republican of Kentucky, sent formal letters to Secretary of State Marco Rubio, Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe. The letters requested briefings on all unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) records in the government’s possession. The goal, the lawmakers wrote, was to “deliver transparency to the American people.”
Luna said her inquiries have revealed startling claims from individuals she believes are credible witnesses.
“Based on testimony that would be based on witnesses that have come forward,” she said. “But what I can tell you is just we’re told that they were that, they’ve seen things.”
Without divulging classified material, Luna added that these accounts often involve phenomena outside conventional understanding.
“What I can tell you without getting into classified conversations is that there have been incidences that I believe were very credible people have reported — that there have been movement outside of time and space,” she told Rogan.
NEW: Rep. Anna Paulina Luna claims she has seen evidence of "interdimensional beings" with credible people reporting "movement outside of time and space."
"They call them interdimensional beings. I think that they can actually operate through the time spaces that we… pic.twitter.com/ae3pQhkKOb
The congresswoman, a U.S. Air Force veteran, emphasized that she has not personally witnessed portals or alien spacecraft. Instead, she is focused on securing documentation that could substantiate the possibility of life beyond Earth.
“I’ve never seen a portal or a spaceship,” Luna said. “But I am searching for documentation that could lead to more evidence of life beyond humans.”
Her pursuit reflects a broader conservative push for declassification of UAP-related material, framed not as fringe speculation but as a matter of government accountability. Republicans have increasingly criticized federal agencies for what they view as excessive secrecy, particularly on issues with significant public interest.
For Luna, the effort appears to be both investigative and philosophical — an attempt to take credible witness testimony seriously while compelling the federal bureaucracy to release what it knows.
Although discussion of “interdimensional beings” may invite skepticism, her insistence that multiple reliable sources have reported inexplicable events underscores her argument: Congress has a duty to follow the evidence, wherever it leads, and the American people have a right to know what their government has learned.