Good Morning Australia!! - The cop who shot Justine is under arrest - Did Muammar Gaddafi fund French politics? - Tonga attacks women's rights - Poland and the EU head to a showdown - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

Minneapolis Police Officer Mohamed Noor turned himself in to face second- and third-degree murder charges in the death of former Sydneysider Justine Ruszczyk Damond.  She had called police to the alley behind her home last 15 July to report a possible sexual assault; Noor's partner said she appeared at the driver's side window of their police vehicle just after a loud noise startled the officers, which is when Noor fired a round into her abdomen.  The car's video was not recording, nor were the two body cameras on the officers.  If convicted, Noor faces up to 24 years in prison.

In France's most-explosive scandal in decades, former right-wing President Nikolas Sarkozy was questioned over allegations he took contributions from the regime of Libyan strongman Muammar Gaddafi to finance his winning campaign in 2007.  Sarkozy was taken into custody at a police station in northwestern Paris on Monday night, to be interviewed abut the allegations he has denied as "grotesque".  A wealthy French-Lebanese businessman has claimed to be the bagman who ferried the cash from Tripoli to Paris.  It is alleged that Gaddafi piped 50 Million Euros into Sarkozy's campaign, in violation of laws against foreign campaign contributions and more than twice the amount allowed even if foreign political cash weren't against the law.

The walls are closing in on Cambridge Analytica (CA), the political consultant accused of wrongly harvesting the personal data of millions of Facebook users as well as bragging about committing dirty tricks for its clients.  The company board suspended chief executive Alexander Nix, who was caught on video in a UK Channel Four News investigation making the aforementioned boasts.  The US Federal Trade Commission is investigating CA and Facebook over the use of 50 million peoples' personal info.  The British Information Commissioner's Office is obtaining a court warrant to search CA's London offices.  Facebook representatives are due before the US Congress on Wednesday to explain exactly happened, and Mark Zuckerberg himself has been summoned before Parliament to answer questions about the misuse of data.  The firm claims to have been instrumental in the election of the orange clown Donald Trump.

Cambridge Analytica was also used by Kenyan President Uhuru Kenyatta in his two successful elections.  The main opposition coalition National Super Alliance is accusing CA and Kenyatta's ruling party of trying to "subvert the people's will" and is calling for investigations into both elections.  Last year's election was already mired in controversies and the Supreme Court ordered it be re-done.

Poland had held firm and refused to roll back its so-called reforms to the judicial system.  Critics and the European Union say Poland's far-right ruling party has politicized the judiciary in violation of EU membership rules, and now Poland is in danger of being the first country to be punished under Article 7 of the Treaty of Amsterdam which allows the EU to go after member states that violate European values. 

Police in Brazil arrested the Roman Catholic Bishop of a central city for alleged corruption.  Bishop Jose Ronaldo of Formosa and six other priests are accused of skimming US$700,000 from church coffers around the capital Brasilia. 

Two cardo ships collided off the Port of Karachi, Pakistan, spilling their cargo containers into the water.  Crews have been trying to recover the goods.

There's anger in Tonga after a national school official apparently banned young women from taking part in school Rugby and Boxing programs, which is viewed as ridiculous and regressive.  Tonga's Ministry of Education and Training issued the order supposedly to "preserve the dignity of Tongan women and hold on to Tongan cultural values".  Whatever the hell that's supposed to mean.  "How can we teach our girls to be independent when we keep making choices for them?" asked Fehoko Tu'ivai, president of the Tonga Women's Rugby Association.  School officials and pols are upset about this flagrant attack on women's rights.

In stupid America, another kid with a gun shot at two fellow students in a Maryland High School, leaving both in a critical condition.  A school cop fired at the gunman, but it's not clear if that kid died of that or a self-inflicted wound. 

In San Antonio, Texas, a FedEx worker was left with ringing in the ears after a package exploded on a conveyor line.  Investigators are determining if it is related to the package bombs that killed two people and injured three others just north of there in Austin.

LGBT Rights advocates say people convicted under past laws that ban homosexuality ought to be compensated by the government.  "People lives have been wrecked by an injustice that was done to them by the law and it is really the least they can expect to have some kind of recompense in their old age for this rather terrible thing that has happened to them," said veteran campaigner Bill Logan, who wants NZ to follow the "civilized" examples of Canada and Germany.  The ministry of justice said that so far the government isn't considering compensation.

The Queen knighted Sir Richard Starkey, but he'll always be Ringo Starr to us.