Sheriff Says Detectives Still Have More to Work with in Guthrie Kidnapping
- Nancy Guthrie, a 54-year-old woman, went missing on Feb. 1 in Tucson, and the case remains under active review as of March 6, 2026.
- Pima County Sheriff's Department and FBI investigators canvassed the neighborhood Thursday and quizzed three neighbors, who said some locals reported web-connection issues the night before.
- Investigators are reviewing doorbell camera footage showing an armed man, masked and gloved, approaching the home while DNA from gloves found nearby is being examined.
- The Guthrie family offered a $1 million reward, and Savannah Guthrie, TODAY host and daughter, visited NBC's studios Thursday while on leave and expects to return to the program.
- Unusual technical leads prompted investigators to review electronic interference possibilities, probing whether the suspect carried a possible WiFi jammer and following neighbors' reports of web glitches.
26 Articles
26 Articles
Legal Crisis for Chris Nanos: Pima County Sheriff Hit With £1m Lawsuit Amid Nancy Guthrie Probe
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos, the law enforcement official leading the Nancy Guthrie investigation in Arizona, is facing a $1.35 million federal lawsuit after a jail inmate alleged that deputies exposed him to Covid-19 inside Pima County Jail. Christopher Michael Marx filed the case in the US District Court for the District of Arizona on March 5, naming Nanos and his department as defendants. Nancy Guthrie Sheriff Chris Nanos hit with $1M law…
Nancy Guthrie neighbors asked about internet glitches on night she went missing, report says
Investigators reportedly told locals that some neighbors reported internet issues the night before the apparent abduction.
Nancy Guthrie update: Strange internet outages may have hit the area during abduction; neighbors call it 'really weird'
Law enforcement went door-to-door in the area, asking neighbors whether they noticed any disruptions to their internet service on the night Nancy went missing.
Sheriff says detectives still have more to work with in Guthrie kidnapping
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos says fewer people are involved in the day to day search for Nancy Guthrie but it is still an active, aggressive search and he is still optimistic she will be found.He says, I think when this thing first kicked off, we got up to close to 400 officers and FBI agents and from all over the valley working this. Today, I think we're probably down to a task force of 10-20, detectives, FBI agents, that are really just ass…
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