NBC-affiliated KVOA News 4 Tucson recently broadcast a special segment titled Bring Her Home — The Disappearance of Nancy Guthrie. In the program, the Guthrie family appealed to the public, stressing the importance of any information related to Nancy’s disappearance, no matter how seemingly minor.
The special will also be featured on upcoming Sunday broadcasts of Today and NBC Nightly News.
Below is the heartfelt plea from Nancy’s children, Savannah, Camron, and Annie Guthrie, and their spouses:
We sincerely appreciate the overwhelming support from our neighbors, friends, and all residents of Tucson. We now consider you all part of our extended family.
We firmly believe that the people of Tucson and the broader southern Arizona community are crucial to solving this mystery. It’s likely that someone out there has a piece of information that they might not even realize is crucial. We urge everyone to reflect on any details from around January 31, the early hours of February 1, and the evening of January 11.
We are pleading for a renewed focus on our mother’s situation – please review any security camera footage, notes, text messages, or even past conversations that might now seem relevant. No piece of information is too trivial. It could be the breakthrough we need.
Every day, we feel the absence of our mother intensely and find no solace until she is found. Our sole aim is to locate her and bring her back. We wish to honor her vibrant and brave spirit, but we need closure to do so.
Thank you for your unending prayers.
Nancy Guthrie, mother to Savannah Guthrie, a well-known television journalist, was last seen on the night of January 31, when a family member dropped her off at her home. She was reported missing the following noon. Within three days, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos reported that Nancy was likely abducted from her residence, as indicated by her DNA found in blood samples on her porch and a disconnected security camera.
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Law enforcement has been investigating probable ransom notes received by TMZ and other local media, while Savannah and her siblings continue to issue public appeals for their mother’s safe return. Sheriff Nanos has confirmed that all family members have been ruled out as suspects.
Recently, federal agents have collected DNA evidence from an individual other than Nancy on her property. The FBI has secured a sample from a glove found near her home that seems to match the type worn by a masked and armed figure seen in a doorbell camera video previously released by the agency. The results are pending final quality checks and confirmation before being compared to known DNA profiles in a national database. The FBI is offering a $100,000 reward, complemented by a $1 million family-offered reward, for information leading to Nancy’s safe recovery.
Earlier this month, Savannah Guthrie returned to the Today show studios for the first time since her mother’s disappearance. During her visit, she shared with her colleagues, according to NBC News, “I wanted you to know that I’m still standing, and I still have hope, and I’m still me. And I don’t know what version of me that will be, but it will be. I’m holding onto my faith. I still believe. And as my mom would say, ‘Where else would I go?’”
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Anonymous
I genuinely feel for this person, but it’s painfully obvious she’s not coming back alive. And yet this story gets far more attention than the other 1000s of missing persons who might still be out there.