Good Morning Australia!! - The parents of Charlie Gard make their final decision - A truckie faces capital punishment for his illegal and unethical delivery - Poland drops its judicial power-grab - The death of a butt booster - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

And just like that, the international controversy over the fate of a terminally-ill British baby is over.  The parents of little Charlie Gard have dropped their legal efforts to take him to America for untested experimental therapy for a rare inherited mitochondrial disease called MDDS, for which there is no known cure.  British health officials blocked them from taking the baby to Boston for treatment; but in a London court, the Gard family attorney said, "US neurologist Dr. Michio Hirano had said he was no longer willing to offer the baby experimental therapy after he saw the results of a new MRI scan last week."  The case raised questions over whether parents or doctors get the final word over treatment of critically or terminally ill children.  The parents were also backed by US evangelicals and anti-Abortion rights activists, Pope Francis - and Donald Trump, who nebulously offered to "help" the parents.

Trump has made no such offer to the families of the undocumented immigrants found roasting inside the back of a big-rig trailer in San Antonio, Texas, abandoned in the sweltering sun through the depraved indifference of human traffickers.  The death toll is now ten including two children, and the 28 or so survivors are hospitalized, some with brain damage after being asphyxiated in the heat.  The truck's driver - 60-year-old James Matthew Bradley Jr. of Tampa, Florida - told a court he had no idea what kind of cargo he had been carrying.  Bradley faces the death penalty or life in prison.

Trump's son in law and White House aide Jared Kushner said he had "nothing to hide" as he testified behind closed doors for a Senate Intelligence Committee hearing probing Russian influence over the 2016 presidential election.  Kushner - who was not required to take an oath to tell the truth - admitted to four meetings with the Russians, including; two encounters with the Russian ambassador in Washington, a meeting with the head of a Russian state-owned bank, and the June 2016 meeting with a Russian lawyer and others that was set up by Kushner's brother-in-law, Donald Trump Jr.  But he claimed "all of my actions were proper" in the course of the campaign.

People power has won in Poland - President Andrzej Duda says he will veto a controversial law to replace Supreme Court judges with government nominees.  The ultra-conservative and nationalist ruling PiS party set off alarms in Warsaw and Europe by passing the bill enabling undemocratic the power grab, and prompted thousands to protest every day and night since the upper house approved it.  European Council President Donald Tusk, a former Polish prime minister, warned against it; so did Solidarity Union founder Lech Walesa whose protests in the 1980s ended the Soviet system; and 1980s anti-Soviet dissident Zofia Romaszewska, who noted that the authoritarian bill is no different than the old Cold War system.

Swiss police are looking for the chainsaw attacker who injured five people at an insurance office in the town of Schaffhausen on the northern border.  Area residents say 51-year-old Franz Wrousis has been living rough in the woods outside town for at least a few weeks.  His motives aren't clear.

The United Nations is warning that Israel and the Palestinian Authority have until Friday to ease current tensions and violence over security at the Holy Site known as the Temple Mount to Jews, and as Haram al-Sharif to Muslims.  "They have the potential to have catastrophic costs well beyond the walls of the old city, well beyond Israel and Palestine, well beyond the Middle East itself," said Nikolay Mladenov, UN Envoy for the Middle East.  The current trouble started with the killings of two Israel cops at the site earlier this month, which led to Israel installing metal detectors, which led to protests and more violence.

The Pakistani Taliban claimed responsibility for a suicide bombing at a vegetable market in Lahore, killing at least 25 people.  Over the border in Kabul, Afghanistan, the other Taliban group set off a car bomb killing 30 people and injuring 42 more.

Brazil police say a woman who performed illegal buttocks enhancements with completely unsafe industrial silicon injections has herself been murdered.  49-year old Marcilene Soares Gama was charged with pretending to be a doctor in Sao Paulo and Rio de Janeiro.  "She never said she was a surgeon.  People knew the risks but they went ahead anyway," said her brother-in-law, Daniel Mofacto to O Dia newspaper.  "But I do believe that she was murdered by a vengeful client."