Good Morning Australia!! - Trump's Jekyll and Hyde routine probably isn't fooling anyone - "Lives have been saved" because of the late Fiona Richardson - The rock band that might want to change its name - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Victoria's Minister for Family Violence Prevention Fiona Richardson is dead at age 50, a day after announcing she would have to take more time off to deal with several newly diagnosed tumors.  "My recovery is not going the way I planned," Ms. Richardson wrote in a statement on Tuesday.  "I remain passionately committed to the vision shared by myself and other victim-survivors to eradicate violence in the home within a generation and to end its dangerous and costly impact on families and children."  Her family praised her "bravery" for facing the disease, and Victoria Premier Daniel Andrews noted her legacy: "Under her watch a dark and silent tragedy was brought into the harsh and unforgiving light of a royal commission," Andrews said, "Victoria has a different system now.  Our state will never be the same.  Lives have been saved.  And I know who to thank."

Venezuela is seeking an international arrest warrant for former top prosecutor Luisa Ortega.  The former government supporter fled the country earlier this month - not by boat as had been earlier claimed - and is in Brazil where she is reportedly cooperating with prosecutors looking into the continent-wide corruption scandal involving involving the major construction firm Odebrecht, which apparently paid bribes to any Latin American official with a functional hand to grab it.  Colombian media is speculating that Ortega also might have information about possible Venezuelan support for the Marxist FARC former rebels which have just completed the transition from outlaw rebel militia to political party.

A small time Los Angeles rock band has cancelled its gig in Rotterdam, Netherlands after police found a van with Spanish license plates that was packed with gas cylinders parked near the venue.  The Allah-Las claim they didn't intend to offend anyone by incorporating the Muslim word for god in their name back in 2008.  Spanish police spent this week killing and arresting members of a terrorist cell that killed 14 people in and around Barcelona.

The US has sacked the commander of its Navy 7th Fleet because of the deadly collisions between two of his warships and civilian shipping vessels.  In a statement, the Navy said it had lost confidence in Vice Admiral Joseph Aucoin's ability to command.  Ten sailors are still listed as missing from the USS John McCain after it crashed with an oil tanker near the Strait of Malaca this week; Seven were killed when the USS Fitzgerald collided with a container ship in Japanese waters near the port city of Yokosuka.

American scumbag Donald Trump must be getting hypocrisy-whiplash from all of the flip-flops he's pulling off this week.  Speaking before the military veteran's group The American Legion in Reno, Nevada, Trump stuck to the teleprompter and paid lip service to "unity" with phrases such as "we are one people" and "we never stop striving for a better future".  But those words dripped with acrid cynicism, because less than 24 hours earlier the orange clown was in full manic bigot and rabble-rouser mode at a third reich-style (and poorly attended) campaign rally in Phoenix, Arizona.  He lied about his shameful response to the racist violence in Charlottesville, Virginia earlier this month, and portrayed himself as the victim (instead of the young woman who was murdered by a Trump-loving nazi who rammed his car into a crowd of counter-protesters).  Trump also criticized Arizona's two Republican senators, inspiring some of his foamy-mouthed yokels to call for the death of one of them - John McCain, a military hero, who is battling brain cancer.

Trump's vile and unhinged performance in Phoenix led the former director of national intelligence James Clapper - a 50-year public servant in intelligence - to conclude he is not fit for the job as president.  Clapper denounced Trump's "behavior and divisiveness and complete intellectual, moral and ethical void" and asked:  "How much longer does the country have to, to borrow a phrase, endure this nightmare?"  Clapper's main concern is Trump's access to the nuclear codes:  "There's actually very little to stop him" from launching a nuke at North Korea, "which is pretty scary".

Hillary Clinton says her "skin crawled" during that second presidential debate last year when the orange clown appeared to lurk behind her and stalk her as she gave an answer to a question.  In recounting the October incident, she referred to Trump as a "creep" in her upcoming book, "What happened" (I would have added two words in between "What" and "happened", just saying).  The book is due out in September, but portions of the audio version - read by Hillary herself - were played on US cable news.  Just IMHO, but if Trump had pulled that on someone in a New York subway he would have been pepper-sprayed.

Angolans are voting for a new president and for the first time in 38 years Jose Eduardo Dos Santos is not on the ballot.  The longest-serving president is stepping down, but his Democratic Socialist MPLA party is expected to be the winner when results are announced later this week.

The Chairman of the India's Railway Board resigned after two train derailments in five days in the northern state of Uttar Pradesh.  The latest derailment injured more than 70 people, while one on Saturday killed at least 23 passengers and injured about 156.  India tends to have a lot of train disasters, but last year Mr. AK Mittal was the first rails chief to actually get a two-year extension on his job.  After this week, nope.