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Warwickshire batsman Laurie Evans signs a one-month loan deal with Northants for four-day cricket.
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Read MoreMousumi Bakshi
BBC Look East
Det Ch Insp Steve Woliter, from the East Midlands Special Operational Unit, led the investigation into India Chipchase’s death.
Speaking outside court he described her murderer Edward Tenniswood as "the worst kind of predator".
Det Ch Insp Steve Woliter speaks outside court
An "oddball" loner is jailed for a minimum of 30 years for the rape and murder of a barmaid he promised to "get home safe" after they met outside a nightclub.
Read MoreMousumi Bakshi
BBC Look East
Supt Chris Hillery, head of local policing, said the rape and murder of India Chipchase was unprecedented in Northamptonshire.
"I understand people's genuine concerns about going out, however, we want people to be able to visit our town centres and enjoy themselves - there is no reason not to," he said.
"This was a tragedy that affected a lot of people in Northampton, and I want reassure them that this was an unprecedented incident, unlike any other we have seen in one of our town centres in all my years at Northamptonshire Police."
Det Ch Insp Steve Woliter, from the East Midlands Special Operational Unit, said outside court police didn't believe there were any other victims of Edward Tenniswood, adding that officers had done an extensive search of his rented property on Stanley Road, including the excavation of the garden.
As well at the victim impact statment from India's father, there was also a statement read during the trial from Sue Chipchase.
Mrs Chipchase said her daughter "lit up a room" and had ideas of becoming a life-saving paramedic.
Mrs Chipchase added: "Her death has left a huge void in all our lives and her siblings are quiet and subdued without her.
"The actions of this man mean we have been condemned to a life spent grieving for a child whose potential we shall never see."
Edward Tenniswood has been sentence to a minimum of 30 years in prison for the murder and rape of India Chipchase earlier this year.
Mousumi Bakshi
BBC Look East
At Birmingham Crown Court, Judge Justice Saunders said this was a "crime of utter depravity", adding he will "be handing down a sentence of life imprisonment".
He said India Chipchase "was vulnerable" and that Edward Tenniswood "took advantage of her vulnerability".
Tenniswood was handed life imprisonment with a minimum term of 30 years for the murder of India Chipchase.
He was given 12 years for the rape to run concurrent to the life imprisonment tariff.
Edward Tenniswood has been jailed at Birmingham Crown Court for life with a minimum term of 30 years for the murder and rape of 20-year-old India Chipchase.
Sally Chidzoy
BBC Look East home affairs correspondent
Edward Tenniswood gave his evidence to the jury as if he was on stage. He appeared to enjoy the audience - so much so that a police officer commented to me that he "was getting off on it all".
It was as if he was reliving everything and rewriting history.
The judge repeatedly told him to keep his sentences short but he refused, going into tasteless and inappropriate detail.
He talked of bringing a dummy into court to illustrate a point and said he drank so much the day he met India his body contained "more wine than blood".
At one point, the judge asked jurors to leave the courtroom because India's relatives were visibly upset by Tenniswood's graphic testimony.
He was argumentative with the judge and barristers and frequently became angry and went off topic.
But ultimately, the jury didn't believe his account of the night India Chipchase went missing, and he was found guilty of raping and murdering the 20-year-old.
Jeremy Chipchase, father of murdered India, has spoken of his grief that "I'll never walk India down the aisle", in a victim impact statement shown in court.
Edward Tenniswood was found guilty of raping and murdering 20-year-old India Chipchase in Northampton after she went missing on a night out in January.
Mr Chipchase explains in this emotional video how India's murder has affected him, his wife and India's siblings.
Jeremy Chipchase: "I'll never walk India down the aisle"
The crime reporter from the Northampton Chronicle and Echo, external, Callum Jones, has been following the two week trial of Edward Tenniswood.
The 52-year-old was found guilty of raping and murdering India Chipchase earlier.
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As the guilty verdicts of both rape and murder were delivered, Edward Tenniswood looked down and raised his eyebrows, and then dropped his face into his hands.
Mr Justice Saunders told him he would be jailed later today and will face a mandatory life sentence.
India's family, who were in the public gallery of the court, wept. Her father, Jeremy Chipchase, said in a statement: "I sincerely hope there's no possibility that another woman ever falls into the hands of my daughter's murderer."
Laurence Cawley
BBC News
When police discovered India Chipchase's body, it had more than 30 fresh injuries - some of them consistent with an assault.
Her belongings - including a handbag, shoes and mobile phone - were placed around the house in such a way as to appear inconspicuous. There were "other women's clothes and shoes" dotted throughout his rented home.
These, and newspaper clippings of women he believed resembled former girlfriends, were regarded by Edward Tenniswood as "ornaments", the Birmingham Crown Court trial heard.
Three hours after entering his home, police caught up with Tenniswood at a nearby Ibis hotel. He was in the lounge watching television, and his greeting was chilling.
"You know who I am - Edward," he told officers.
"I'm surprised you were so quick, it didn't take you long to find me.
"I suppose you've been to the house - you've found what you're looking for."
Laurence Cawley
BBC News
Tenniswood was a "meticulous" loner, whose home revealed an obsession with cleanliness, laid bare for all to see in an estate agent's property pictures.
Photographs of the three-bedroom house revealed an interior covered in plastic sheets, food bowls covered with plates and newspaper on the floor.
He often wore latex gloves, which he bought by the 100 for £3.99 from Poundstretcher. The curtains were always drawn and there was only ever one light on in the house in an upstairs room.
Tenniswood said he "contained" himself to living upstairs.
Laurence Cawley
BBC News
The jury at Birmingham Crown Court heard Edward Tenniswood was a calculated obsessive who lured India Chipchase to her death in his plastic sheet-covered home.
"India Eve Chipchase please let me know you're ok please darling... love you xxxcc." By the time Suzanne Chipchase posted this short message on Facebook, her daughter was already dead.
The jury found Tenniswood's claims in court that throttling her was the result of his "over-eagerness" to satisfy her in bed impossible to believe.
It instead decided the evidence showed he raped and murdered her.
Northamptonshire Police has released the first picture of Edward Tenniswood, the man found guilty of raping and murdering India Chipchase in Northampton earlier this year...
Mousumi Bakshi
BBC Look East
The judge at Birmingham Crown Court, Justice Saunders, spoke directly to the aunt and uncle of India Chipchase, saying: "There is no sentence I can pass that can fully compensate for the loss of India."
He will sentence Edward Tenniswood, who has been found guilty of raping and murdering India Chipchase, at 14.30.
Police in Northamptonshire have released a series of short CCTV clips showing the final movements of India Chipchase and the arrest of her murderer.
Edward Tenniswood, 52, has been found guilty of the 20-year-old barmaid's murder in Northampton in January.
The footage shows Tenniswood talking to India outside NB's nightclub, their taxi journey to his home in Stanley Road and his eventual arrest at a hotel.
Elinor Cross
BBC Radio Northampton
Edward Tenniswood has been found guilty of raping and murdering 20-year-old India Chipchase.
It took the jury an hour and 45 minutes to unanimously find Tenniswood guilty after a two week trial at Birmingham Crown Court.
Tenniswood, 52, spotted India Chipchase outside a bar in Northampton, where she'd been on a night out drinking.
The court heard he told bar staff he would help her home. Instead he took her to his house on Stanley Road where he raped and strangled her.
Police found her body on a mattress on the house and Tenniswood was arrested at a hotel bar.
Tenniswood told the court the sex had been consensual and said he had throttled her accidentally, but the jury found him guilty of rape and murder.
The meticulous loner who betrayed a vulnerable young woman's trust and lured her to her death.
Read MoreEdward Tenniswood, 52, has been found guilty of murdering and raping 20-year-old India Chipchase in Northampton earlier this year.