New consequences for Thailand’s coup – Some ne’er-do-well is apparently trying to auction off Michael Schumacher’s medical records – Cops solve a century-old mob hit – And a lot more in your CareerSpot World News Briefs:

South Korean forces captured the renegade army sergeant who killed five comrades at a border post.  The sergeant, believed to be in his twenties, shot himself in the stomach in a failed suicide attempt.  After his condition stabilizes, investigators will determine why he tossed a grenade at his fellow soldiers and opened fire on them.

For the first time in more than two weeks, divers have been able to recover a body from the sunken Sewol ferry off South Korea’s southern tip.  This, as the trial continues for 15 Sewol crew on charges of criminal negligence and abandoning passengers.  Captain Lee Joon-Seok and three senior crewmembers face the death penalty if convicted of “homicide through willful negligence”.  But the captain’s defense has signaled it will fight the charge, primarily because there was no malice aforethought.

The European Union is suspending all official visits, and setting aside plans to deepen political and business ties.  This is in protest of last month's military coup.  Brussels says top-level ties are on hold “until a democratically elected government is in place.”

At least eight people and dozens were hurt in a suspected Boko Haram suicide bombing on a college in northern Nigeria.  The Kano School of Hygiene trains nurses and other health care workers; all that, plus co-ed classes run afoul of Boko Haram’s insane interpretation of Islamic Sharia law.  The group kidnapped hundreds of schoolgirls two months ago – the government has made no visible progress finding them, and hopes of their rescue are fading.

Kenya says its fighter jets bombed al-Shabab militants across the border in Somalia and border area, killing at least 80.  The group killed 71 people during last September’s attack on an upscale mall in Nairobi, and more recently killed more than 60 people in two attacks on Kenyan coastal villages.

Three people wre killed ina police shoot out in a Favela just a few kilometers from Rio de Janeiro’s Maracana Stadium, with tens of thousands of tourists roaming about the city.  Two teens and a cop were killed.  Complexo do Alemao was supposedly one of the first Favelas to undergo military police “pacification” in 2012, but is the still the scene of several violent incidents.

The number of political prisoners being held in Cuba has climbed to 114.  Of that group, the opposition Cuban Commission for Human Rights and National Reconciliation (CCDHRN) says 80 are “peaceful dissidents”.  But the number compiled by the group also includes twelve dissidents who were already paroled from prison – which makes them legally barred from traveling abroad.

F1 racing legend Michael Schumacher’s management says someone stole his confidential medical files, and may be trying to sell them to media outlets for big bickies.  Manager Sabine Kehm is vowing legal action against the seller and any potential purchasers.  Schumacher was placed in a medically induced coma after a skiing accident in December.  Details of Schumacher’s recovery are being kept secret, but last week, he was moved from a hospital in France to a facility in Switzerland near his mansion.

Police in Sicily believe they have finally solved the murder of a police officer – more than a century after it happened.  New York City cop Joe Petrosino was sent to Sicily in 1909 to gather evidence, but was found shot dead.  But during a recent sweep of Palermo’s extortion rackets, one suspect was overheard boasting of the killing.  Domenico Palazzotto told another mobster that “the uncle of my father was called Paolo Palazzotto.. he killed the top policeman killed in Palermo” on the orders of a local Don named Cascio Ferro.  The elder Palazzotto was never charged.  But the current generation has its own legal troubles to worry about.