Nancy Guthrie’s case: FBI expands probe, digital clues emerge, and Savannah Guthrie pleads for her mother's safe return

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 FBI expands probe, digital clues emerge, and Savannah Guthrie pleads for her mother's safe return

A quiet, cactus‑lined Tucson street has become the nerve center of a national search for Nancy Guthrie, the 84‑year‑old mother of 'Today' co‑anchor Savannah Guthrie, who is believed to have been abducted from her home in the early hours of February 1.

Neighbors now trade story fragments at driveways and backyard fences, recounting when law enforcement first crossed their property lines and how closely the desert‑walled subdivision has become the focus of a growing federal–local probe.

A neighbor’s small piece of the puzzle

Lorenzo Jensen, a resident who lives just behind the property of Nancy Guthrie’s daughter, Annie Guthrie, said authorities stopped by his home again on February 10 and requested permission to inspect the outside of his yard, according to CNN.

Lorenzo Jensen added that he only recently learned the neighboring property belonged to Annie Guthrie and that the only other time law enforcement had visited his house was about five or six days earlier, when FBI agents knocked on doors to see if anyone had noticed or heard anything unusual in the area.That backyard‑by‑backyard attention reflects how investigators are treating every property and line of sight as part of the same larger scene.

Officers have removed recording devices, checked blind spots, and collected debris that may help them piece together the minutes before and after Nancy Guthrie disappeared.

How phones and video may lead to answers

Reportedly, experts studying the newly released FBI footage say even small digital traces could be crucial. Criminologist and behavioral‑analysis expert Casey Jordan told reporters that the masked, armed figure shown near Nancy Guthrie’s front door appears to have had a cell phone in their pocket as they approached the house.Casey Jordan explained that investigators can use the video’s timestamp to see which devices were pinging nearby cell towers at the time, even if the suspect’s phone was switched off. “They can zero in on all of the devices pinging off the cell tower and try to narrow it down to cell phone numbers that may not belong in the area, or if they do belong in the area who do they belong to? Do they belong to somebody who might fit this description?” Casey Jordan said, in remarks reported by CNN and other outlets.

“You can be sure they’re working on that right now,” she added.Watch the video here

Savannah Guthrie’s plea after seeing the video

After seeing the FBI‑released images of the masked individual at her mother’s front door, Savannah Guthrie issued a renewed, raw appeal for help. In a public statement credited by the above shared portal, she said she is certain her mother, Nancy Guthrie, is still alive and begged anyone with information to come forward, stressing that her family would pay to see Nancy returned safely.

“None of us will know peace until she is home,” Savannah Guthrie added in an emotional plea, asking people to reach authorities rather than heading to the media or social media with unverified tips.“We believe she is still alive, bring her home,” said Savannah Guthrie after watching the CCTV footage. For now, law enforcement and Nancy Guthrie’s family are holding to the belief that she is still out there and insisting the search will not stop until they find her. Neighbors such as Lorenzo Jensen stand outside homes that have turned into crime‑scene perimeters, quietly hoping that, somewhere in all the data and the door‑to‑door visits, an unremarkable phone number or an unexpected witness will finally point toward the house on the hill where Nancy Guthrie once quietly lived — and from which they all pray she can soon return.

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