Our live coveragepublished at 18:07 GMT 26 March 2021
That's all for our live coverage today.
Keep an eye out here over the weekend for breaking stories and we'll be back with more news, sport, travel and weather from 08:00 on Monday.
Updates from 22 - 28 March
That's all for our live coverage today.
Keep an eye out here over the weekend for breaking stories and we'll be back with more news, sport, travel and weather from 08:00 on Monday.
The decision to scrap this year's event was not "taken lightly", the Crufts chairman says.
Read MoreA toxic combination of ketamine and alcohol could have led to her death, expert says.
Read MoreA Hereford events venue is considering reserving a section of its site for guests who've had a Covid vaccination.
The Left Bank Village said people who had had the jab would have access to all areas, but one inside and one outside area would be off-limits for those who had not been vaccinated.
It's asking customers for their thoughts on the idea, which it says would continue after lockdown is due to end on 21 June.
Care staff who committed "gross failures" as Rachel Johnston died remained in post, inquest hears.
Read MoreAzra Hussain is the seventh person in as many years to hang herself at the secure accommodation.
Read MorePC Anthony Ritchie and former PC Steven Walters are due to appear in court next month.
Read MoreFootage shows a man wading through thick mud to help the bird from a lake which has been drained.
Read MoreThousands of Asda supermarket workers have won a major victory at the Supreme Court in their battle for equal pay.
The court upheld an earlier court ruling that lower-paid shop staff, who are mostly women, can compare themselves with higher paid warehouse workers, who are mostly men.
The judge stressed the ruling did not mean the 44,000 claimants had won the right to equal pay, but are now free to take further action.
Kate Gorton, one of the claimants in the case, said the difference between the pay of workers on the shop floor and distribution centres was "significant".
Ms Gorton, who worked in Asda stores in Stoke-on-Trent and Coventry between 2011 and 2019, said: "The difference in pay was between £1 and £4 an hour. This case goes back to 2016 so Asda should have resolved it a long time ago.
"The difference in pay still goes on today."
Restrictions are easing, but with parts of Europe seeing rising infections, should the UK be worried?
Read MoreCamera retailer Jessops has filed notice it is to appoint administrators after it was badly hit by lockdown restrictions.
All of the company's stores, including its flagship site in Temple Row, Birmingham, are closed until 12 April due to lockdown restrictions.
The company was bought by Dragons' Den presenter Peter Jones in 2013.
It currently employs 120 staff and runs 17 stores.
The 29-year-old was found dead at a house in Overdale on Tuesday, a day after she was assaulted.
Read MoreA group of DJs are putting on a day-long fundraiser for a friend who lost his leg after contracting sepsis.
Ian Thompsett, from Rugby, who goes by the name of DJ Ian T, tested positive for Covid-19 on the day his leg was amputated and ended up in intensive care.
Speaking from hospital, the 43-year-old DJ told BBC CWR the fundraising effort for him had been "quite humbling".
"I've never felt that I would need one of these," he said, "I've always been the one supporting everybody else, so to wake up and find out the guys had put this together was absolutely phenomenal."
The group of DJs will play a 16-hour fundraiser, external on 3 April.
Birmingham Live
Some of the Birmingham Live headlines today include:
Babysitter Sean Sadler will serve at least 20 years in jail for the murder of Lilly Hanrahan.
Read MoreThree men and two women arrested on suspicion of murder following the death of a woman in Telford have been released on bail while inquiries continue.
West Mercia Police said officers had responded to reports on Monday evening a woman had been assaulted in Haybridge Road, Hadley, near the Premier Store.
The force said it was told she had returned to an address in Overdale, where she was discovered dead the following day.
The council officer says more people get involved with council meetings when they take place online.
Read MoreWho will be elected Police and Crime Commissioner for Cheshire on 6 May?
Read MoreAnne Linton and a man who burgled her swap Christmas gifts and he regularly does her gardening.
Read MoreA council has apologised after using out-of-date information when sending letters reminding people to register to vote.
Dudley Council admitted some residents had received letters for May's elections addressed to previous occupants after "we accidentally used data from a previous year".
Despite living and being registered at her current address for almost four years, Jo Easthope, from Dudley, was among those to receive a letter on Friday.
It was addressed to a former resident whom she was told by neighbours had died.
"It has always been drummed into me to vote, I have only missed one vote since I was 18 which was when I was undergoing chemotherapy," she said.
Ms Easthope said she had tried to call the council about the situation, but had only been able to leave a voicemail and had not had a response.
She has now re-registered to vote, but said she was worried it would not go through in time for her to vote in the upcoming local elections on 6 May.
Kevin O'Keefe, the council's chief executive and electoral returning officer, said it would review its checking system but the error had only affected people who had moved house since 2016.
"If you have voted at the same address previously, you do not need to take any action. People only need to get in touch if there are changes at the property or if they wish to register for a postal vote."