Good Morning Australia!! - One of the world's biggest drug dealers is found guilty - A crazed Trump fan physically attacks the media - Spain's "trial of the century" is on - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Drug lord Joaquin "El Chapo" Guzman has been found guilty on all 10 counts at his drug-trafficking trial at a federal court in New York.  The 61-year old Mexican former leader of the Sinaloa Cartel is noted for escaping from Mexican prisons after his previous convictions, but this time he's likely to thrown into an American maximum security prison and you don't just tunnel out of those - it is likely he will spend the rest of his life behind bars.  Prosecutors said he imported hundreds of tons of cocaine into the US, conspired to manufacture and distribute heroin and methamphetamine, and used hitmen to carry out "hundreds" of murders, assaults, kidnappings, and acts of torture on rivals.

El Paso, Texas authorities will not charge an unhinged and violent Trump fan who attacked a BBC Camera Operator at a rally on Monday night.  Donald Trump and other speakers have been whipping the small crowd into a frenzy and condemning the news media throughout the spectacle, when the man was caught on video pushing and shoving the camera operator and attempting to break the camera.  The press area was unsupervised, and no security tried to intervene during the incident.

France is vowing a crackdown on anti-Semitic attacks which increased by more than 70 percent last year - spreading "like a poison".  The Interior Ministry says such "disgusting" acts had risen in 2018 to 541 from 311 the previous year, including 81 violent ones.

With a no-deal Brexit looking more and more like it's going to happen, the European Commission is proposing allowing trains to use the Channel Tunnel  between England France for three months to give both sides extra time to renegotiate the terms under which the railway service operates.  Such a law must first be adopted by the European Parliament and EU member states. 

The trial of a dozen leaders of Catalonia's secession movement began in Madrid.  Spanish prosecutors charged them with offenses including including rebellion and sedition, and some could face up to 25 years in prison.  The most high-profile of the Catalan leaders - former President of Catalonia Carles Puigdemont - fled abroad and remains in exile.

California's Governor Gavin Newsom has cancelled plans to construct a high speed rail between Los Angeles and San Francisco.  "Let's be real," the Democratic Party rising star said in his first State of the State address, "The current project, as planned, would cost too much and respectfully take too long."  The US lags way behind its increasingly distant allies like Europe and Japan in terms of public transportation and high speed rail, especially in the western US; Japan's first bullet train line first opened in 1964.