Pelosi Advisor Secretly Present During January 6 Capitol Protest

Daily Report March 17,2025


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It was during a conversation about Aaron Black that Kylie Jane Kremer first learned he was reportedly “Nancy Pelosi’s fixer.” The executive director of Women for America First shared this revelation during her first media interview since the events of January 6, 2021.

The discovery came during a gathering in North Carolina’s Outer Banks, where Kremer and her event staff had retreated following the Capitol violence. During this time, she questioned Jennifer Lawrence about a mysterious phone call that Lawrence’s fiancé, Dustin Stockton, had made during their “March for Trump” bus tour.

“At one point we had to pull over the vehicles so that Dustin could make a private phone call that he did not want anyone else in the vehicle [to hear],” Kremer said. “And it was very odd. He was acting very weird; he was very secretive about it, would not tell us who the phone call was.”

When Kremer learned the call was to Aaron Black, Lawrence allegedly explained his connection to Pelosi, saying he was her fixer and had known them since their Tea Party days on the West Coast.

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“I felt very unnerved by it, because I can’t think of a world that I would have anything to do with anybody in Nancy Pelosi’s office or orbit,” Kremer expressed.

Stockton, however, disputes Kremer’s account of the secretive call. “It was no secret that I knew Aaron Black and that we had an open line of communication going back more than a decade,” Stockton told Blaze Media. “The Kremers were well aware of my relationship with Aaron Black long before January 6.”

Their connection dated back to Black’s involvement with Occupy Wall Street in 2011 and Stockton’s coverage of the 2016 presidential campaign for Breitbart News. Black later admitted to organizing disruptive elements at a Chicago Trump rally in 2016, as captured in a Project Veritas video.

Stockton’s testimony to the January 6 Select Committee suggested that outside forces had deliberately orchestrated chaos that day. He described a “well-funded, well-paid group of probably 50-ish who were intent specifically on causing violence and chaos that day.”

Black, who identifies himself as a senior political adviser to @TeamPelosi on social media, has maintained a low profile throughout his career. “Nobody is really supposed to know about me,” he once told an undercover Project Veritas journalist in 2016.

His background includes roles as a rapid-response director, protest leader, and political operative for Democracy Partners, the Democratic National Committee, and Hillary Clinton’s 2016 campaign. In a 2018 interview with high school students, Black emphasized the importance of controlling narratives in political campaigns.

Though Black initially told Stockton he wasn’t in Washington on January 6, he later admitted to being on the Capitol steps after being confronted with photographic evidence. “I don’t know the extent of his involvement in the setup of American patriots on January 6,” Stockton reflected, “but took it as an unforgivable betrayal.”

The involvement of operatives like Black in the January 6 events raises questions about external influences on that day’s developments, suggesting a complex web of political maneuvering behind the scenes.