tt_Explosive new vide0: a convoy of cars circles Nancy Guthrie’s home the night of her kidnapping — a trail of hidden clues, or a dead-end mystery?

New surveillance video from one of Nancy Guthrie’s neighbors captured several cars driving nearby her Tucson home the night authorities believe she was kidnapped.

The footage, obtained by Fox News Digital, was recorded on a street-facing Ring camera at a home in the Catalina Foothills neighborhood roughly seven minutes away from Guthrie’s one-acre property.

The time stamps in the edited-down video recorded a dozen cars driving by between 12:30 a.m. and 6 a.m. MST on Feb. 1 – the day Guthrie was reported missing. Investigators believe she was abducted between those hours.

During that window, 12 cars passed in front of the home. It’s not clear if any vehicle drove past the house more than once that night.

The property reportedly sits on a back road away from major intersections in the area. It’s about 2.5 miles away from the 84-year-old’s home.

It’s unclear if any of the cars had been on Guthrie’s street.

Neighbors in her Catalina Hills community claimed they saw a suspicious man lumbering around the street near Guthrie’s home in the weeks leading up to her disappearance.

“He didn’t have your typical walking gear on, and he had his hat pulled really far over his eyes,” neighbor Aldine Meister told Fox News Digital.

“He was kind of younger, and he just didn’t look like he was going out for a walk,” she added. “He just didn’t fit.”

Previous security footage from a doorbell camera at Guthrie’s home showed a masked man loitering on her front stoop the night authorities believe she was abducted. The man blocked the camera with branches after he appeared to notice it was recording.

The man, seen wearing a black Ozark Trail Hiker backpack, tried to cover the camera with branches, according to the footage.

Authorities uncovered articles of clothing near Guthrie’s home, including black gloves. Neighbors independently highlighted a white van parked on the block days before Guthrie’s disappearance, but authorities haven’t raised any flags about suspicious vehicles they’re searching for.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Office and FBI, who are leading the investigation, reportedly started winding down this week as they conducted one last sweep for evidence at Guthrie’s million-dollar home.

Evidence recovered at the home, including traces of blood, is still being investigated, but Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos warned that it could take up to “a year” to analyze DNA.

No suspects have been identified in the Guthrie case 25 days after she vanished. Her children, including “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, offered a whopping $1 million reward for her safe return.

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