Hello Australia!! - New video conflicts with the official account of a police shooting of a black man in America - While two white cops face charges for more killings - Rescues and ruin in Aleppo - And more in your CareerSpot Global News Briefs:

The wife of a man killed by US police released video she recorded of the incident - video the police apparently didn't know she had recorded of the shooting on Tuesday.  It shows Charlotte, North Carolina police pointing weapons at a vehicle in which Keith Lamont Scott is sitting.  His wife Rakeyia Scott repeatedly implores police not to shoot, explains that he suffers the after effects of a traumatic brain injury (TBI), and asks Mr. Scott to exit the vehicle.  Then, five shots in rapid succession are heard and Mr. Scott is lifeless on the ground.  At this point, there are no objects on the ground around him. 

But later in the video, there are objects on the ground; and police claim that a photograph taken by an officer minutes later shows a gun on the ground.  I guess what I'm trying to say is that it really, really looks like the cops were caught trying to plant a gun on an innocent man they had just killed.  Charlotte police have pointedly refused to release video from the body and dash cameras they claim justifies the shooting.  Doubts over the police version of events sparked three days of civil unrest in Charlotte.

Meanwhile, authorities in Saint Louis have charged a white former cop with First Degree Murder for killing a black motorist and planting a gun on the scene in 2011.  Jason Stockley has since left the police force.  Newly released video shows Stockley pointing his personal AK-47 assault weapon at the driver Anthony Lamar Smith; killing him; and then retrieving a weapon from his patrol car which is planted at the scene to frame Mr. Smith.  Critics say there was ample evidence to charge Stockley with the murder years ago.

And in Tulsa, Oklahoma, prosecutors filed First Degree Manslaughter charges against white police officer Betty Shelby for this week's fatal shooting of 40-year-old Terence Crutcher, an unarmed black man and father of four who was hoping officers had come to help him with his stalled vehicle.  Unlike the stonewalling and foot-dragging going on in North Carolina and Missouri, authorities have moved quickly to release the dashcam and police chopper video showing Crutcher was unarmed and shot for no legitimate reason. 

Members of the Colombian rebel group FARC have unanimously approved the peace deal with the government.  "The was is over," said the group's chief negotiator, Ivan Marquez.  President Juan Manuel Santos and FARC leader Timoleon "Timochenko" Jimenez will formally sign the agreement at a ceremony on Monday.  The deal takes effect if the Colombian people approve it in a referendum on 2 October, which seems likely because most people want to end the five decade civil war.  Timochenko will lead the Marxist group as it transitions from a military to a political force in Colombia.

In Moscow, eight firefighters died when the roof of a warehouse caved in.  They were inside searching for survivors when the thing came down.  The fire was especially dangerous because the warehouse contained gas canisters and plastics.

Russian and Syrian air strikes continue to pound rebel held areas of Aleppo, Syria.  At least 90 people have been killed, and rescuers are trying to pull as many survivors out of the rubble as possible, sometimes with mobile video recording the scene.  Thousands of miles away, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told the United Nations that the US and Russian plans to end Syria's conflict must be saved.

The death toll from the capsizing of a refugee ship off Egypt's Mediterranean coast is 162 lives lost.  People on the ship say there were 450 to 600 immigrants on it before it sank 12 kilometers off Rosetta.  Most of them were immigrants from Syria and the Horn of Africa.  They also said smugglers forced anyone who wanted a lifejacket to pay extra.