DEVASTATING VISIT: Family Pays Tribute at Nancy’s Home

Savannah Guthrie and her siblings broke down in tears during their first visit to a memorial outside their missing mom’s Arizona home on Monday as the investigation enters its second month.

The “Today” co-host, her sister, Annie, and brother-in-law, Tommaso Cioni, were seen visiting the makeshift memorial for Nancy Guthrie around 10:45 a.m. local time, per a video shared via X by NewsNation correspondent Brian Entin.

Footage from the clip showed the trio crying and carrying yellow flowers to the 84-year-old’s memorial, where countless other flowers already lay alongside signs made in Nancy’s honor.

Savannah Guthrie Tomasso and her sister Annie Guthrie, accompanied by two sheriffs and another individual, carry flowers.
Savannah Guthrie and her siblings (as seen here) broke down in tears during their first visit to the memorial outside their missing mom’s home on Monday.

Savannah Guthrie, her sister Annie, and Tomasso embracing.
Savannah, Annie Guthrie and Tommaso Cioni (as seen here) visited the makeshift memorial for Nancy Guthrie as the search for the missing 84-year-old enters its second month.NewsNation

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Savannah Guthrie shares heartfelt message as search for missing mom Nancy reaches 1-month mark: ‘Don’t stop praying’

A two-photo collage of the Guthrie family and Nancy Guthrie's Arizona home.

Nancy Guthrie’s home to be returned to family as desperate search nears 1-month mark

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Hoda Kotb, in a red blazer, and Craig Melvin, in a grey jacket and grey tie, on the set of the Today Show, Image 2 shows Savannah Guthrie poses with her mother, Nancy Guthrie

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Savannah and her siblings — who were flanked by officers from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department — grabbed each other in a tight and loving embrace after placing down the flowers for their missing mom.

Monday marked 30 days since Nancy was first reported missing from her Tucson home on Feb. 1.

Last week, just a few days before Savannah was spotted back at her mom’s residence, it was revealed that the FBI and the Pima County Sheriff’s Department were preparing to release Nancy’s home back to her children.

People embrace near a mailbox with a "Missing Nancy Guthrie" poster and a sign from neighbors.
Savannah, her sister and brother-in-law (as pictured here) broke down in tears as they laid flowers down at the memorial for their missing mom.

Savannah Guthrie and her sister Annie Guthrie embracing another person at Nancy Guthrie's house.
The trio (as seen here) embraced one another during their visit to Nancy’s memorial.NewsNation
After the FBI spent several hours at Nancy’s home on Feb. 25, sources told The Post that the federal agents were most likely looking for any last scraps of evidence that could have been overlooked in the ongoing case.

Last week also saw Savannah release a heartbreaking new video to say that she and her family accept that Nancy may “already be gone.”

She also announced a $1 million reward for any information that leads to her mom’s “miracle” return.

Savannah Guthrie Tomasso and her sister Annie Guthrie embracing while a man comforts them at Nancy Guthrie's memorial.
This marked the first time Savannah (as seen here) was spotted at her mom’s memorial since Nancy was reported missing on Feb. 1.NewsNation

A makeshift memorial outside Nancy Guthrie's home, featuring flowers and signs pleading "PLEASE COME HOME!" and "BRING NANCY HOME!!!"
Nancy’s memorial (as seen here) has been covered with countless flowers and signs wishing for her safe return.James Keivom for NY Post
“We also know that she may be lost. She may already be gone,” Savannah said through tears on Feb. 24. “She may have already gone home to the Lord that she loves and is dancing in Heaven with her mom and her dad and with her beloved brother, Pierce, and with our daddy.”

She added, “And if this is what is to be, then we will accept it, but we need to know where she is. We need her to come home.”

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department announced early in its investigation that they believe Savannah’s beloved mother was kidnapped in her sleep because a trail of blood belonging to Nancy was found outside the front door of her Catalina Hills home.

A ransom note was also sent to several news outlets demanding $6 million in bitcoin — including a deadline of 5 p.m. MT on Feb. 9.

Savannah Guthrie, with light brown hair, pleadingly looks at the camera while wearing a light yellow cardigan over a cream ribbed shirt.
Savannah (as seen here) released a heartbreaking video on Feb. 24 to say that she and her family accept that their mom may “already be gone.”Instagram / @savannahguthrie

Savannah Guthrie and her mother, Nancy Guthrie, smiling at the camera.
The “Today” co-host (pictured here with Nancy before she disappeared) also announced a $1 million reward for any info that leads to her mom’s return.via REUTERS
That deadline came and went, however, and an FBI spokesperson said that Savannah and her siblings never shared “any continued communication” with the suspected abductor.

Investigators later released photos and videos of an unidentified masked individual breaking into Nancy’s home on Jan. 31, the night she was last seen.

Although several possible suspects were detained in connection with Nancy’s mysterious disappearance, each one was released shortly after.

The FBI, meanwhile, has since relocated most of its team searching for Nancy away from Tucson and back to Phoenix.

Surveillance image of a suspect in a mask and gloves, with a shoe highlighted in a red circle, wanted in connection with the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
Investigators released photos and videos of a masked individual (seen here) breaking into Nancy’s home on Jan. 31.FBI

Investigators outside Nancy Guthrie's home in Tucson.
The FBI (seen here outside Nancy’s Tucson home on Feb. 25) did one last sweep for evidence before returning the property to Savannah and her siblings.James Keivom for NY Post

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But that shift doesn’t necessarily mean that the bureau is giving up or scaling back its search for the missing 84-year-old, according to former FBI Special Agent Tracy Walder.

“The FBI was probably taking agents from Phoenix down to Tucson. And they can’t be there indefinitely,” Walder told The Post last week.

“Clearly, the FBI has processed or gotten as much physical evidence as they need at the scene. So they don’t need agents there full-time.”

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