PREPARED CITIZEN INTEL BRIEF
June 25, 2025
1. Domestic Security & Civil Unrest
U.S. cities remain calm. No confirmed protests, riots, active shooters, mass shootings, or Second Amendment litigation/events in the past 24 hours.
Bulletin: DHS maintains a nationwide alert due to potential domestic backlash tied to Iran–Israel conflict, warning of possible lone actor threats or low-level cyber incidents.
2. Extreme Heat Risk
A heat advisory is active across southeast Louisiana and southern Mississippi today, with heat-index piling up to 110°F (10 AM–7 PM CDT).
The advisory may extend through June 26. No floods or storms to report today.
3. Border & Immigration Enforcement
No new ICE raids, arrests, or doxxing incidents. Operations continue quietly in sanctuary cities.
ICE has recently targeted Iranian nationals, arresting 11 June 21–22 for suspected terrorist ties, but no new activity today.
CBP shows consistently low border crossings under current asylum restrictions.
4. Travel Advisory - Israel & Iran
State Department “NOTICE” (June 25): U.S. citizens in Israel/West Bank urged to exit via any available routes, air (Ben Gurion open), land (to Jordan/Egypt), sea (to Cyprus).
U.S. Embassy passport and consular services have resumed.
5. International Flashpoints
The Trump-brokered Iran–Israel ceasefire continues to hold with no new breaches today.
On June 24, Iranian missiles killed three in northern Israel; Israel responded with a strike on Syria’s Mezzeh military site. Civilian casualty reports are conflicting.
Iran is reportedly facing internal unrest…soldier desertions, and punishments underway. The threat to close the Strait of Hormuz remains, though shipping is continuing, and no immediate fuel price impact has been observed.
6. Global Security Updates
Somalia: Joint Somali forces struck 12 al‑Shabaab militants near the Jubba River on June 24.
Sudan: WHO reports over 40 killed (including children and health workers) in a weekend attack on Al Mujlad Hospital in West Kordofan; the region remains under humanitarian strain.
Mexico/Cartels: U.S. imposed sanctions on Los Chapitos cartel. Cross-border violence stable today, though Chiapas remains a tension point.
Signals to Monitor
Possible domestic incidents or cyber threats tied to Iran–Israel escalation.
Ceasefire fragility in the Middle East.
Heat-related public health strain in Gulf States if advisory extends.
Ongoing cartel tensions near U.S.–Mexico border.
Preparedness Actions
Heat safety: Stay hydrated, avoid peak sun, use cooling gear, watch vulnerable individuals.
72-hour kits: Include 1 gal/day water, first-aid, comms devices, battery packs, cooling towels, electrolyte mixes.
Cybersecurity: Harden devices against phishing and hacking amid Iran-related cyber-warning context.
Travel: U.S. citizens in Israel/West Bank should depart via available routes.
Fuel: Keep tanks near full and watch gas prices for Middle East-related supply disruptions.
Analyst Insight
Today’s domestic environment is stable but vigilance remains critical due to geopolitical tensions. The Gulf heat advisory risks public health…preparation is key.
No violence, kidnappings, or travel disruptions reported beyond advisory guidance. Internationally, the Middle East ceasefire holds, but Iran’s internal unrest and hospital attack in Sudan show broader global instability.
Stay safe. Be dangerous.

