HEARTBREAKING: Police say the back door of Nancy Guthrie’s home was found locked from the outside, a detail that immediately changed how investigators viewed her disappearance…
The disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC Today show co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, has taken yet another shocking and deeply troubling turn. In a heartbreaking revelation from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department, investigators have confirmed that the back door of Nancy’s home in the upscale Catalina Foothills neighborhood near Tucson, Arizona, was found locked from the outside when authorities first arrived. This single detail has dramatically altered how the case is being interpreted, shifting focus toward the possibility of a staged or insider-facilitated abduction rather than a straightforward forced entry through that access point.
The discovery came during the initial processing of the residence as a crime scene after Nancy failed to attend church on February 1, 2026, prompting family members to search the property and contact authorities around noon. Nancy had been dropped off at her home around 9:30–9:45 p.m. the previous evening (January 31) after dinner with family. Officials quickly concluded she did not leave voluntarily—her phone, wallet, keys, purse, vehicle, and critical daily medications remained inside, while her pacemaker reportedly stopped syncing around 2 a.m.

Why the Locked Back Door Changes Everything
The back door’s condition—locked from the outside—stands in stark contrast to other evidence at the scene:
A back door was earlier reported as wide open in some accounts, but the latest clarification from law enforcement sources indicates it was secured from the exterior (potentially with a key or deadbolt accessible only from outside).
This suggests the perpetrator(s) may have exited through another route (such as the front door, where a blood trail was documented) and then locked the back door to delay discovery or create confusion.
It raises the chilling possibility that someone with knowledge of the home—or access to keys—could have been involved, as locking from the outside typically requires physical presence outside the property after the door is closed.
This detail has prompted investigators to re-evaluate the timeline and entry/exit paths. Sheriff Chris Nanos has described the scene as showing “specific evidence” of a nighttime kidnapping, with signs of forced entry noted in general terms (though primarily associated with the front area). The locked back door complicates theories of a random intruder who simply broke in and fled, as it implies deliberate efforts to secure the property post-incident—potentially to buy time or mislead responders.
Mounting Evidence at the Crime Scene
This revelation compounds an already disturbing picture:
Blood evidence — Visible droplets, smears, and possible spatter outside the front door (captured on NewsNation video showing dark spots on the tiled porch and walkway), plus a small amount reported indoors. DNA samples are being tested, but the trail suggests Nancy was injured and removed via the front.
Security tampering — Multiple cameras (including a Ring doorbell device) were smashed, ripped off, or missing, likely to eliminate footage. Investigators are working with tech companies to recover any available data.
Multiple footprints — More than two distinct sets outside, indicating several people may have been present.
Medication bag found 20 km away — Nancy’s essential medications (for high blood pressure, pacemaker, and cardiac issues) were recovered discarded far from the home, heightening fears for her survival without them.
K9 activity — Units recently returned to the property, with a notable 43-second pause at the back door and detection of a strange odor (possibly biological or decomposition-related), triggering further forensic examination.
The combination of the locked back door, blood at the front, and tampered cameras paints a picture of premeditation—someone knew the layout, disabled surveillance, and took steps to obscure their exit.

