The VICE Morning Bulletin

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The VICE Morning Bulletin

This morning, a solar-powered plane completes the first US leg of its trip around the world, an LA sheriff's official resigns after his racist emails are revealed, a load of 1960s rock icons hint at a festival later this year, and more.

The solar-powered Solar Impulse plane (Photo: solarimpulse.com)

Everything you need to know about the world this morning, curated by VICE.

US News

  • Clinton Apologizes to Coal Country
    Hillary Clinton was forced to apologize for remarks she made on the decline of the coal industry. Meeting a West Virginia miner who recently lost his job, Clinton said a comment about putting coal miners and companies "out of business" had been a "misstatement."—NBC News
  • Supreme Court Upholds New Minimum Wage in Seattle
    The Supreme Court has turned down a case by business groups attempting to challenge the Seattle law that raises the city's minimum wage to $15 an hour. The International Franchise Association argued local franchises of big companies like McDonald's needed until 2021 to get ready for the wage rise.—Reuters
  • Solar-Powered Plane Completes US Trip
    Solar Impulse, the zero-fuel aeroplane using energy from the sun, has flown from Mountain View, California to Phoenix, Arizona, its first US leg in an attempt to fly around the world. Swiss pilot Andre Borschberg is now aiming to get to New York by the start of June before flying over the Atlantic.—ABC News
  • Racist Emails of LA Police Official Revealed
    Tom Angel, a leading Los Angeles County sheriff's official, resigned after racist emails he forwarded about Latinos, blacks, and Muslims were made public. Sheriff Jim McDonnell said he hoped Angel's resignation would be a "learning opportunity" for members of his staff.—VICE News

International News

  • Syrian Prison Besieged After Riot
    Government forces have encircled a prison in the Syrian city of Hama after prisoners reportedly took captive the warden and several guards. The prison revolt happened in response to the government's plans to transfer several detainees to a notorious military prison near Damascus.—Al Jazeera
  • Canadian PM Promises Investment in Indigenous Communities
    Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said major investment was coming to Canada's isolated indigenous communities. "We have discriminated against indigenous children for generations, for decades, for centuries," he told VICE News. Dozens of indigenous communities have recently declared states of emergency.—VICE News
  • EU Proposes Visa-Free Travel for Turkey
    The European Union's executive will give conditional approval to relaxing visa requirements for Turkish citizens traveling to Europe's passport-free Schengen area. The move must be approved by the European Parliament, but Turkey has threatened to walk away from a migration deal unless it happens.—BBC News
  • Second Refugee Dies After Self-Immolation
    A Somali refugee has set herself on fire at an Australian-run detention camp on the island of Nauru, just days after an Iranian man died in a similar act. Australia's immigration minister blamed refugee advocates for "encouraging" the asylum seekers toward acts of self-harm.—Reuters

Everything Else

  • The Stones, Dylan, and McCartney Hint at Mega-Festival
    The Rolling Stones, The Who, Bob Dylan, and Paul McCartney have all released teaser clips about playing a rumored mega-festival at Coachella's grounds this October. All of the cryptic posts featured the word "October."—Rolling Stone
  • Anti-Smoking Ads Aimed at LGBT Youth
    The FDA launches a $35 million anti-tobacco campaign today focused on LGBT adults using the slogan "Freedom to be, tobacco-free." The FDA says 18 to 24-year-olds who identify as LGBT smoke at double the rate of other young adults.—The Hill
  • Corruption Rising in the Arab World, Poll Finds
    A majority of people—61 percent—believe that corruption is on the rise in the Middle East and North Africa, according to a poll of 11,000 people in the region. Nearly a third said they had paid a bribe to access services.—Middle East Eye
  • Trio of Potentially Habitable Planets Found
    Three potentially habitable Earth-sized planets have been discovered only 39 light years from our own solar system. The TRAPPIST-1 system is home to a trio of exoplanets orbiting an "ultracool" dwarf star.—Motherboard

Done with reading today? That's fine—instead, watch the latest VICE Special: On Patrol with South Korea's Suicide Rescue Team.