I'm Brendan Steinhauser, CEO of the Alliance for Secure AI. We're a coalition of patriotic Americans who want to stop AI from taking our freedoms. Big Tech is propping up AI-powered mass surveillance and exploiting our children online. This is not the future we want. The Alliance is working hard to ensure that we put Americans first. Join us at secureainow.org to learn more. The Alliance is paid for by the Alliance for Secure AI. Iran's Revolutionary Guard threatens American companies across the Middle East. Pete Hegseth reveals his secret trip to meet the troops, and AOC faces an ethics complaint over campaign spending. I'm Daily Wire executive editor John Bickley with Georgia Howe. It's Tuesday, March 31st. This is EvenWire. The Iran conflict widens beyond the battlefield and new threats against American interests across the region. Host of Wired in Live, Cabot Phillips has more. Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corps is now threatening to target U.S. companies across the Middle East starting April 1st, warning employees to leave and telling civilians living nearby to evacuate. The threat comes as Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Danyahu says the wars aimed at stopping Iran from developing nuclear weapons and the long-range missiles to deliver them, arguing Tehran is pursuing the ability to threaten not just Israel, but eventually the U.S. as well. The U.S. Security Council is also meeting today over Lebanon, as three UN peacekeepers have been killed there since the conflict began. War Secretary Pete Hegseth revealed today that he visited troops in the Middle East. The secret trip involved Hegseth meeting with service members involved in Operation Epic Fury from the pilots flying strike missions into Iran to the operators' tasks with intercepting Iranian missiles and drones. Hegseth described the experience in a press conference this morning. The trip was an honor. I had a chance to bear witness, and I witnessed the best of America. I witnessed warriors, a brotherhood of men and women, warriors, all, and their commitment to the mission. The Pentagon is weighing a new layer of defense right in the nation's capital. Daily Wire Reporter Zach Jule has more. Officials are considering deploying an anti-drone laser system near Fort McNair in Washington, D.C., and the U.S. top officials including War Secretary Pete Hegseth and Secretary of State Marco Rubio reside. The move comes after reports of unusual drone activity in the area raising concerns about potential surveillance during a time of heightened tensions with Iran. But the plan is not without controversy. Aviation officials warn the powerful laser system could pose risks in the already crowded airspace near Reagan National Airport. For now, discussions are ongoing, as the U.S. looks to counter a growing drone threat on its own doorstep. President Trump is slamming France over the country's refusal to allow U.S. planes to fly through French airspace. Daily Wire contributor Tim Pierce has the details. In a post on True Social today, the president wrote that France had been, quote, very unhelpful with respect to the butcher of Iran. But then Trump warned that the USA will remember, another reminder from the president, that Europe should not take U.S. assistance for granted. French President Emmanuel Macron has ruled out French involvement in Iran or the Strait of Hormuz. In response to French obstruction, Israel's government has announced it will stop all new defense purchases from the country. A federal judge has blocked an executive order from President Trump, which would have stopped federal funding from going to PBS and NPR. Daily Wire senior editor Virginia Cruta has the story. U.S. District Judge Randolph Moss in Washington permanently blocked President Donald Trump's executive order, ruling that the move was unlawful and unenforceable under the First Amendment. In his opinion, Moss said that the government cannot engage in, quote, viewpoint discrimination and retaliation of that kind, pointing to Trump's own public statements that he wanted to defund the outlets because he viewed them as biased toward Democrats. NPR has argued that the administration was trying to punish it for the content of its journalism by cutting off access to grant money appropriated by Congress. The ruling keeps the order from taking effect and hands the administration a significant legal defeat in its efforts to strip federal support from public broadcasting. A political showdown is brewing between Congressman Eric Swalwell and the FBI just weeks before California voters head to the polls. Swalwell is threatening legal action after reports that the bureau may release files tied to his past connection with a suspected Chinese spy. His attorneys warned the move would violate federal law and amount to election interference. Swalwell addressed the FBI's efforts at a press conference yesterday. This effort to weaponize the FBI against the president's political enemy at a time that we are at war shows a distraction. The FBI has not yet commented. The records reportedly involve Christine Fang Fang Fang and alleged Chinese operative who had ties to multiple California politicians. Swalwell denies any wrongdoing and no charges have been filed. Congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez is facing a new ethics complaint over her campaign spending. Daily Wire's senior editor, Joel Needler, has more. A watchdog group alleges nearly $19,000 in campaign funds were used to pay a psychiatrist known for controversial ketamine-based therapies. Expenses listed as, quote, leadership training and consulting. The complaint argues the payments may have been used for personal use, which would violate federal campaign finance law. Ocasio-Cortez has not responded publicly and no findings have been made. The case has now been referred for review potentially setting up a broader ethics investigation. No, it's not your imagination. Risk and regulation are ramping up and customers now expect tangible proof of security just to do business with you. That's why our sponsor, Vanta, is a game changer. Vanta automates your compliance process and brings compliance, risk, and customer trust together on one AI-powered platform. So whether you're just starting out and prepping for your first SOC2 audit or you're running a full enterprise GRC program with multiple frameworks, Vanta keeps you secure and keeps your deals moving forward. The platform handles the heavy lifting, continuous monitoring, evidence collection, all the tedious stuff that usually eats up your team's time. Companies like Ramp and Ryder spend 82% less time on audits with Vanta, which means more time to focus on what really matters, growing your business, shipping features, and delighting customers. Instead of scrambling to gather evidence or wondering if you're actually compliant, you get real-time visibility into your security posture and a clear path to staying audit-ready year-round. Why wait? Get started at vanta.com slash morning wire. That's vanta.com slash morning wire. A case over two middle schoolers in Let's Go Brandon sweatshirts will head to the Supreme Court. The case involves two Michigan brothers who were told to remove their hoodies for allegedly breaking the school dress code. The brothers then sued, arguing that the school had violated their First Amendment rights. Earlier this year, the Sixth Circuit ruled in favor of the school, finding that the phrase Let's Go Brandon fell under the First Amendment exception to vulgarity. The phrase is a popular euphemism for an explicit insult against Joe Biden. George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley has called the Sixth Circuit's decision one of the worst free speech decisions to come out of the appellate courts in years. The Supreme Court handed down a major conservative win in a near-unanimous decision today. Daily Wire homepage editor Jordan Schroeder has more. The Supreme Court ruled 8 to 1 Tuesday in favor of a Christian counselor, Kaylee Chiles, who challenged a Colorado law she said could punish her for helping gender-confused children become comfortable with their own bodies instead of pursuing irreversible transgender medical procedures. The law prohibits counseling that, quote, attempts or purports to change an individual's sexual orientation or gender identity. Chiles said that the law violates her First Amendment rights and has prevented her from accepting several clients. Justice Neil Gorsage wrote in the majority opinion that the courts failed to apply the rigorous First Amendment scrutiny in the case. Ann said, quote, while the First Amendment protects many in varied forms of expression, the spoken word is perhaps the quintessential form of protected speech. And that is exactly the kind of expression in which Ms. Chiles seeks to engage. Liberal Justice Sotomayor and Alina Kagan wrote a concurring opinion. Justice Kintanji Brown Jackson was the lone dissenter. Canada's House of Commons has passed a new hate speech bill, which according to critics, removes protections for religious belief in public discourse. Daily Wire culture reporter Megan Basham has the story. The House of Commons just passed Bill C-9, sending the Liberal government's anti-hate legislation to the Senate. The bill became contentious after Liberals agreed to remove a long-standing religious exemption from Canada's hate speech law, a protection that currently shields people who, quote, in good faith express views rooted in religious belief or religious texts. Critics say removing that carve-out could expose people to punishment for publicly voicing traditional religious views on issues such as homosexuality or gender if those statements are deemed hateful under the law. Supporters argue the change closes a loophole in existing hate speech protections. Bill C-9 now heads to the Senate, where the fight over the limits of religious speech in Canada is far from over. A mural of Ukrainian stabbing victim, Marina Zyrutska in Providence, Rhode Island, is being removed at the request of two local Democrat politicians. 23-year-old Zyrutska, who had recently fled Ukraine, was brutally stabbed on a Charlotte train in August of 2023, allegedly by a repeat violent criminal. The mural represented a damning indictment of the soft-on-crime policies that led to her death. Here's Democrat General Assembly member David Morales speaking to the press about why he thinks the mural should be erased. Ultimately, we want to make sure that every community member that calls Providence home feels safe, and we can both agree that this mural behind us does not reflect Providence's values, nor does it reflect the creativity that we want to see in our city. Providence Mayor Brett Smiley, who ultimately ordered its removal, called the mural divisive. The suspect, Decarlus DeWon Brown Jr., was a repeat offender with 14 prior arrests, including armed burglary and had recently shown signs of psychosis. Conservative activists, including Elon Musk, who funded the mural, say he should never have been on the streets. And Tiger Woods has pleaded not guilty to charges stemming from his latest DUI arrest in Florida. Authorities say two hydrocodone pills were found in his pocket after he crashed and overturned his SUV near his home. Officers noted Woods showed signs of impairment, including bloodshot eyes and slowed movements, though a breath test showed no alcohol in his system. Investigators believe he was under the influence of medication at the time of the crash. He faces charges of driving under the influence, property damage, and refusing a chemical test. A California man was found dead in an out-of-service, unlocked police car days after being released from jail. Daily Wire Assistant Editor Andy Valdes says the details. Family and friends of 37-year-old Eric Valencia are demanding answers after his body was found March 26 in the backseat of a police car parked outside of the Azusa police station. Three days earlier, officers arrested him on suspicion of driving under the influence, but he was later released for a lack of evidence. Relatives said they reported him missing after his release, and now they want to know how he got into the vehicle and why he remained there for days unnoticed. Police Chief Rocky Wenrich said the car, quote, should have been secured that an independent firm is investigating and that Valencia's cause of death remains unknown, pending an autopsy by the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner. Those are your drive home updates this evening. To learn more about these stories, go to DailyWire.com. And in case you missed it earlier today, we covered some major stories, including the White House weighing boots on the ground in the Middle East, Cuba receiving a tanker full of much-needed oil, and NASA preparing to launch its first manned mission around the Moon in more than 50 years. Thanks for tuning in. We'll be back tomorrow morning with another full edition of Morning Wire.