Good Morning Australia!! - The FBI investigates a Russian connection to the Democratic Email hack - Prisoners of Turkey's post-coup crackdown are reportedly being sexually assaulted in prison - Russia's doping scandal claims seven more Olympic athletes - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The US Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating the hack into the Democratic National Committee emails.  It's first acknowledgment from the agency that they are probing the incident, which US officials suspect came from a Russian state-sponsored cyber attack.  "A compromise of this nature is something we take very seriously, and the FBI will continue to investigate and hold accountable those who pose a threat in cyberspace," the Bureau said in a statement.  The emails revealed that some party insiders were biased for Hillary Clinton over Bernie Sanders during the primary elections. 

There are signs of trouble at the Democratic National Convention even crazier than last week's Republican convention.  Crowds of Bernie Sanders' followers booed him when he urged them to support Hillary Clinton during a rally before the convention kicked off in Philadelphia.  Although the leaked Democratic Party emails thus far show no sign of anything other than a bias in favor of Hillary Clinton, there is a core minority of Sanders supporters who feel the primary elections were somehow "fixed" in a grand conspiracy. 

Turkey is now going after journalists in the wake of the failed alleged coup d'etat and state of emergency.  Dozens of reporters have lost their press credentials, police are raiding their homes, and pro-government newspapers are publishing the names and faces of journalists they deem traitors.  This follows tens of thousands of teachers, civil servants, and cops and soldiers being fired from their jobs as President Recep Tayyip Erdogan consolidates power. Remember "First they came.."?  This is what it looks like.

Meanwhile, Amnesty International says it has troubling new evidence that some of the people arrested in Turkey are being subjected to rape and beatings during their post-coup detention.  "It is absolutely imperative that the Turkish authorities halt these abhorrent practices and allow international monitors to visit all these detainees in the places they are being held," said Amnesty's Europe director John Dalhuisen in a statement.  Erdogan has extended the length of time people can be held without charges from four to 30 days.

New Zealand Ju Jitsu athlete Jason Lee says he was kidnapped by men in police uniforms and forced to make ATM withdrawals in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.  The 27-year old martial artist tweeted: "What did you guys get up to yesterday? I got kidnapped. Go Olympics! #Rio2016."  Ju Jitsu is not an Olympic event, and he isn't taking part in the Summer Games that start in just over a week, but it highlights security concerns as athletes begin arriving in Rio.

Some that won't be going to Rio:  Seven Russian swimmers have been banned by the sport's international governing body because of doping.  The International Olympic Committee (IOC) chickened out this week, and refused to act on the World Anti-Doping Agency's (WADA) recommendation that Russia be banned entirely because of wide-ranging, state-sponsored collusion, leaving it to individual federations to identify and ban performance-enhancing substance abusers.  One of the seven banned Russians is Yulia Efimova, who won Bronze in London in 2012.

Horror in Madagascar:  Fire ripped through a thatched-roof home during a party, killing 38 people including 16 children.  The fire started outside and spread to the structure, but people panicked and couldn't get out the single door to safety.  Police are treating the tragedy as an accident.

Spain has had its first case of a baby born with microcephaly to a woman infected with the Zika virus.  Health officials say the woman was infected while overseas, although they didn't specify which country.  The baby's vital signs were "normal and stable" at Barcelona's Vall d'Hebron hospital, but the skull and brain are abnormally small as has been the case with thousands of such births in Brazil. 

Police in northern India arrested two men and are hunting four more after a tourist from Israel was gang raped.  This happened in Manali, a popular Himalayan destination.  The woman got into a car believing it was a taxi, and was taken to a secluded area where she was attacked.  Gang rape and sexual abuse has gotten more scrutiny in India since the 2012 gang rape and murder of a student on a Delhi bus - but clearly, India still has a problem.