Everything you need to know about the world this morning, curated by VICE.Police Shoot Man Dead During Routine Traffic Stop
Philando Castile, a 32-year-old black man, was shot and killed by police during a traffic stop in Falcon Heights, Minnesota. Castile's girlfriend livestreamed the immediate aftermath and claimed he was shot "for no reason at all" as he reached for his driver's license. Angry crowds protested outside the governor's mansion overnight. —Minneapolis Star TribuneAttorney General Closes Case on Clinton Emails
Attorney General Loretta Lynch said she is accepting the FBI's recommendation not to charge Hillary Clinton over her use of a private email server while serving as secretary of state. A Clinton campaign spokesman said: "This case is resolved, no matter Republicans' attempts to continue playing politics."—CNN
US News
Philando Castile, a 32-year-old black man, was shot and killed by police during a traffic stop in Falcon Heights, Minnesota. Castile's girlfriend livestreamed the immediate aftermath and claimed he was shot "for no reason at all" as he reached for his driver's license. Angry crowds protested outside the governor's mansion overnight. —Minneapolis Star TribuneAttorney General Closes Case on Clinton Emails
Attorney General Loretta Lynch said she is accepting the FBI's recommendation not to charge Hillary Clinton over her use of a private email server while serving as secretary of state. A Clinton campaign spokesman said: "This case is resolved, no matter Republicans' attempts to continue playing politics."—CNN
Advertisement
Feds Take Over Alton Sterling Shooting Case
The US Department of Justice's Civil Rights division has taken over the investigation of the fatal shooting of Alton Sterling, 37, by police officers in Baton Rouge. A second video surfaced late Wednesday of the killing in the parking lot, and does not appear to support the officers' claim Sterling represented a threat. —NBC NewsDuPont Ordered to Pay $5 Million to Man with Cancer
A federal jury found that chemical conglomerate DuPont acted with malice by dumping a toxic chemical from its West Virginia plant into the Ohio River. The jury awarded $5.1 million in compensatory damages to David Freeman, 56, who developed cancer as a result of the infected water supply.—USA Today
The US Department of Justice's Civil Rights division has taken over the investigation of the fatal shooting of Alton Sterling, 37, by police officers in Baton Rouge. A second video surfaced late Wednesday of the killing in the parking lot, and does not appear to support the officers' claim Sterling represented a threat. —NBC NewsDuPont Ordered to Pay $5 Million to Man with Cancer
A federal jury found that chemical conglomerate DuPont acted with malice by dumping a toxic chemical from its West Virginia plant into the Ohio River. The jury awarded $5.1 million in compensatory damages to David Freeman, 56, who developed cancer as a result of the infected water supply.—USA Today
International News
A car bomb has killed 12 Libyan troops allied to General Khalifa Haftar, commander of forces with the country's eastern government. Haftar's troops have been fighting a campaign against Islamist militants in the city of Benghazi. It is unclear whether the car bomb attack was carried out by ISIS. —ReutersUS Sanctions North Korean Leader
North Korean leader Kim Jong-un has been sanctioned for the first time, as the US accused him of human rights abuses. The US Treasury said Kim and ten other top North Korean officials have been placed on a sanctions blacklist for the killing and torture of political prisoners in the country's prison camps. —VICE News
Advertisement
Two Policemen Killed in Eid Attack in Bangladesh
At least two policemen have been killed and five others wounded after an explosion at a checkpoint near a mass Eid prayer meeting in Kishoreganj, northern Bangladesh. A group of attackers then started shooting at police. One attacker was killed and another was arrested, according to police.—Al JazeeraFormer Rwandan Mayors Jailed for Genocide
A French court has sentenced two former Rwandan mayors to life in prison for their role in the massacre of ethnic Tutsis in 1994. Tito Barahira, 65, and Octavien Ngenzi, 58, were found guilty of crimes against humanity and genocide. It is the second case of its kind to be brought in France. —BBC NewsDrake Responds to Alton Sterling Shooting
The rapper penned an open letter on Instagram responding to the death of Alton Sterling, the 37-year-old black man killed by police officers in Baton Rouge. "No one begins their life as a hashtag, yet the trend of being reduced to one continues." —Rolling StoneThe New Iron Man Is a Young Black Woman
Marvel has revealed a 15-year-old black girl will be donning the armor of Iron Man in a new comic series. The end of Civil War II, an ongoing crossover event in the comics, will see Tony Stark replaced by Riri Williams, a Chicago-born science genius studying at MIT.—The GuardianFox News CEO Sued for Sexual Harassment
Former Fox News host Gretchen Carlson has filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against CEO Roger Ailes, alleging he fired her from the network for refusing to sleep with him. She claims he asked her to "turn around so he could view her posterior." —TIMEBlair's Letters to Bush Revealed
The Chilcot report, the inquiry into Britain's involvement in the Iraq war, has revealed dozens of letters written by Tony Blair to George W. Bush. One explained how the battle against Saddam Hussein should be presented: "He's bad; we're good." —VICE NewsSharing Netflix Passwords Now a Federal Crime
One of the nation's most powerful appeals courts has ruled sharing passwords can be a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Civil liberties groups say the broad interpretation means millions are violating the law by sharing Netflix and HBO accounts. —MotherboardMexico's Junk Food Tax Making Poor Buy Less Crap
Online journal PLOS-Medicine found a 5.1 percent fall in junk food sales since Mexico instituted a tax on high-calorie snacks in 2014. The fall was most noticeable among the poor: a 10.2 percent drop in consumption. —VICE News
At least two policemen have been killed and five others wounded after an explosion at a checkpoint near a mass Eid prayer meeting in Kishoreganj, northern Bangladesh. A group of attackers then started shooting at police. One attacker was killed and another was arrested, according to police.—Al JazeeraFormer Rwandan Mayors Jailed for Genocide
A French court has sentenced two former Rwandan mayors to life in prison for their role in the massacre of ethnic Tutsis in 1994. Tito Barahira, 65, and Octavien Ngenzi, 58, were found guilty of crimes against humanity and genocide. It is the second case of its kind to be brought in France. —BBC News
Everything Else
The rapper penned an open letter on Instagram responding to the death of Alton Sterling, the 37-year-old black man killed by police officers in Baton Rouge. "No one begins their life as a hashtag, yet the trend of being reduced to one continues." —Rolling StoneThe New Iron Man Is a Young Black Woman
Marvel has revealed a 15-year-old black girl will be donning the armor of Iron Man in a new comic series. The end of Civil War II, an ongoing crossover event in the comics, will see Tony Stark replaced by Riri Williams, a Chicago-born science genius studying at MIT.—The GuardianFox News CEO Sued for Sexual Harassment
Former Fox News host Gretchen Carlson has filed a sexual harassment lawsuit against CEO Roger Ailes, alleging he fired her from the network for refusing to sleep with him. She claims he asked her to "turn around so he could view her posterior." —TIMEBlair's Letters to Bush Revealed
The Chilcot report, the inquiry into Britain's involvement in the Iraq war, has revealed dozens of letters written by Tony Blair to George W. Bush. One explained how the battle against Saddam Hussein should be presented: "He's bad; we're good." —VICE NewsSharing Netflix Passwords Now a Federal Crime
One of the nation's most powerful appeals courts has ruled sharing passwords can be a violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Civil liberties groups say the broad interpretation means millions are violating the law by sharing Netflix and HBO accounts. —MotherboardMexico's Junk Food Tax Making Poor Buy Less Crap
Online journal PLOS-Medicine found a 5.1 percent fall in junk food sales since Mexico instituted a tax on high-calorie snacks in 2014. The fall was most noticeable among the poor: a 10.2 percent drop in consumption. —VICE News