Good evening and welcome to today's Daily Record headline briefing.
The rundown keeps you up to date with the latest news from Scotland and beyond.
Here is everything you need to know to keep up to date.
Broken glass and litter strewn across Glasgow’s Trongate after Celtic fans’ title party celebration
Video footage has captured the shocking aftermath of Celtic fans partying in Glasgow’s Trongate after reclaiming the Scottish Premiership title.
Thousands of supporters filled the streets while flying flags, letting off pyros and singing songs following the Parkhead side’s 6-0 victory over Motherwell on Saturday afternoon.
Police urged motorists to avoid the area around the city’s George Square as party-goers, who celebrated on bus stops and traffic lights, began to arrive at around 4pm.
And the nearby Trongate Theatre was forced to cancel their 7.45pm performance of Who Killed My Father at the last minute due to “circumstances out-with our control”.
Scots hood 'sets up illegal campsite' near farm where his crime clan kept men as slaves
A member of a notorious crime clan convicted of keeping vulnerable men as slaves has been accused of setting up an illegal campsite.
Steven McPhee and his family, including father Robert and brother James, were jailed for a total of 29 years in 2018 on charges of abduction, assault, torture and holding people “in servitude”.
The 41-year-old, who was given three years for an assault on one of the slave workers, has now angered residents in Shotts, Lanarkshire, by buying a piece of vacant land and surrounding it with a 10ft-high fence.
The plot on Rosehall Road is less than half a mile from a pig farm in the town where three terrified victims were kept prisoner.
Since McPhee took over the new site six weeks ago, five caravans and a mobile home have been installed. He is also believed to be living there.
Police probe into allegations of £600,000 SNP donations fraud codenamed Operation Branchform
A police probe into allegations of a £600,000 SNP donations fraud has been codenamed Operation Branchform by detectives.
The investigation was launched last year after it was claimed money had been illegally diverted from a “ring-fenced” fund to fight an independence referendum.
The row over the “missing” cash sparked the resignation of several senior nationalists from the party’s ruling body.
It was claimed SNP chief executive Peter Murrell, who is married to Nicola Sturgeon, had refused them permission to see the party’s accounts.
Scots mum and kids 'could have been killed' after wooden board smashes into car after falling off van
A Scots mum fears she and her four young passengers could have been killed after a large wooden board smashed into the front of her motor.
Claire Naylor was driving along the Standing Stane Road on Saturday afternoon when the debris fell off a passing van as she headed to Kirkcaldy, Fife.
The 28-year-old was forced to brake hard to avoid the door-shaped item from flying through the windscreen of her car at 60mph, leaving her and the children badly shaken.
She now fears her car is a write-off after the board smashed into the bonnet with such force that it pushed a headlight back into the engine.
The Loch Ness monster mystery as the sightings keep coming
Reports of Loch Ness monster sightings keep coming. The latest report, accompanied by a video, is of a 20-30ft long creature occasionally breaking the water’s surface.
Although the video clearly shows a moving v-shaped wake it does not reveal the underlying source. The witnesses certainly saw something, but what?
There have been over 85 theories of what the Loch Ness monster is, ranging from the prosaic (wind slicks, reflections, plant debris and boat wakes) to the zoological implausible (anacondas, killer whales and the ocean sunfish) to the frankly bonkers (ghost dinosaurs).
The people who came up with these theories were not necessarily that familiar with the loch.