“She Would Never Just Leave”: Family Breaks Silence on Nancy Guthrie

The desperate search for Nancy Guthrie is now in its third week, with investigators hoping for a break in a baffling case that they appear no closer to solving.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department said Wednesday that it is pursuing genealogical leads based on partial DNA recovered from the 84-year-old’s home in the Catalina Foothills north of Tucson, Ariz. DNA recovered from gloves found about 2 miles away turned up no matches in the FBI’s national database. The gloves appeared to match those worn by the suspect seen in the video taken from Guthrie’s doorbell camera on the morning she was reported missing, according to police.

The sheriff’s department also said it is working with Walmart to identify who purchased the backpack worn by the person in the footage, as well as the manufacturers of Guthrie’s pacemaker in an effort to locate the device.

Possibility of Accomplice Being Investigated in Nancy Guthrie Kidnapping, Authorities Say

On Monday, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said all members of the Guthrie family, including Nancy Guthrie’s adult children and their spouses, have been cleared as suspects.

“To suggest otherwise is not only wrong, it is cruel,” Nanos said in a statement. “The Guthrie family are victims plain and simple.”

Nancy Guthrie, the mother of Today show cohost Savannah Guthrie, was last seen at around 9:45 p.m. on Jan. 31, when she was dropped off at her home by family members following dinner, police said. She was reported missing around noon the next day after she did not show up at a friend’s house to watch an online church service.

Officials say they have received tens of thousands of tips since the investigation into her disappearance began. Anyone with information is encouraged to reach out to the Pima County Sheriff’s Department tip line at 520-351-4900 or the FBI tip line at 1-800-CALL-FBI.

Five workers were saved. One technician died. Now a jury has to decide if I committed murder.  It started as a classroom thought experiment.  In Justice 101, Professor Sloane drew two tracks and a trolley on the board and asked who would pull the switch to save five people instead of one. Most of us raised our hands. Five lives felt heavier than one.  Two days later, it wasn’t philosophy anymore.  At 11:41 p.m., the emergency dashboard at Bayline Transit exploded in red warnings. A maintenance trolley had broken loose underground, racing downhill toward a repair crew.  “Five on the main line,” the dispatcher shouted. “One on the side spur. Switch control available.”  The senior dispatcher was down the hall, sick. The managers were yelling. And I was the only one standing in front of the monitor.  On the screen: five reflective vests clustered on one track.  On the other: a lone technician kneeling by a cable box, unaware.  The switch lever sat under a plastic guard. Clean. Simple. Final.  If I did nothing, five would die.  If I pulled it, one would.  I pulled it.  Five walked out of that tunnel alive. One didn’t.  Now prosecutors say a classroom theory doesn’t excuse a real-world death — and a jury has to decide whether saving more lives can still be a crime.  Full story in the comments 👇
🚨 A “new” viral video claiming to show María Julissa is actually a piece of 10-year-old footage being weaponized by cartel supporters. Following the death of El Mencho, Julissa has become the target of a massive smear campaign.  Despite her official denials, the rumor mill is spinning out of control, putting her life in immediate jeopardy over a lie. This is the dark side of social media: where a decade-old video can be used to sign someone’s death warrant in 2026. 🛡️👣  READ THE STATEMENT: See María Julissa’s desperate plea to clear her name in the comments. 👇
Seven months pregnant. Pinned to Major. And my own stepbrother drove his fist into my stomach in front of the entire hall.  The applause at Camp Lejeune hadn’t even faded when the doors burst open.  Sixteen years in the Marine Corps. Multiple deployments. That morning was supposed to be the moment everything paid off.  Instead, I hit the floor.  I remember the lights. The shouting. The metallic taste in my mouth. And my mother’s voice — not crying for her grandson, not screaming for help — but yelling at me:  “Don’t ruin his life. You can have another baby. Kyle is fragile.”  Fragile.  Hours later, a doctor stood at my bedside and told me my son was gone.  While I was still trying to breathe through the grief, my mother begged me not to press charges. Said family comes first. Said I owed it to him to stay quiet.  They expected me to protect the man who destroyed my child. They expected me to swallow it for the sake of a last name.  What they forgot is this:  I’m a Marine.  And when I started digging into Kyle’s past — the finances, the lies, the things my mother had been covering for years — I realized that punch wasn’t the first secret they’d buried.  It was just the one that exposed everything.  Full story in the first comment ⬇️
BEYOND THE BILLIONS. 🚨 We knew El Mencho was the world’s most wanted man, but the scene left behind in his mountain “love nest” reveals a side of the drug lord the public was never supposed to see. Even the most hardened Mexican officers were shaken by the discovery inside his kitchen. > Amidst the high-tech surveillance and armored vehicles, it was a simple household appliance that held the most twisted secret of his final hours. Some call it a ritual; others call it a warning. One thing is certain: the “Ghost of Jalisco” was living a nightmare of his own making before the first shot was even fired. 🛡️👣  FULL REPORT on the “Fridge Discovery” and the forensic photos in the comments. 👇