Boeing: As the aircraft manufacturer rushed to build the 737 Max, employees and the Federal Aviation Administration were left in the dark about a fundamental overhaul to an automated system that would ultimately play a role in two fatal crashes.

Big Tech: The two U.S. agencies focused on antitrust, the Justice Department and the Federal Trade Commission, have split up oversight of Google and Amazon, according to three people familiar with the matter. The move signals greater scrutiny, if not yet investigations.

U.S. mass shooting: A Virginia Beach public utilities employee who killed 12 people and injured several others before dying in a shootout with the police on Friday had just submitted his resignation.

India: Rescuers have been looking for eight climbers — four Britons, two Americans, an Australian and an Indian — on the country’s second-highest mountain, the Nanda Devi East, after they failed to report back to base camp on May 26.

Top Shop: Sir Philip Green, the British owner of the major fashion retailer Arcadia Group, has been charged with assault in the U.S. by a fitness instructor in Arizona who accused him of groping her. He denies the allegations and doesn’t plan to attend a hearing in the case, scheduled for June 19.

YouTube: Kanghua Ren, a YouTube prankster known as ReSet to his followers, has been sentenced to 15 months in prison and fined about $22,300 for replacing an Oreo cookie’s cream with toothpaste and handing it to a homeless man in Barcelona, Spain.