Why the Nancy Guthrie Search Feels Like an “Impossible” Mission

THE desperate search for Nancy Guthrie is nearing a gut-wrenching two weeks after investigators said she was taken from her home against her will in the dark of night during the early hours of February 1.

The baffling case of the apparent kidnapping of the mother of popular Today co-anchor Savannah Guthrie has captivated the country, making her rural Catalina Foothills community ground zero for news outlets and true crime influencers.

A film crew with cameras and lighting equipment set up on a dirt road in front of a brick house in a desert landscape.
An aerial view of news broadcasters stationed outside Nancy Guthrie’s home in the Catalina Foothills, north of Tucson, ArizonaCredit: GETTY_NEWS
 

Two people searching in a desert landscape with large cacti and brush.
Investigators search the edges of Nancy’s street
 

Two people walk down a paved desert road lined with tall saguaro cacti and low green brush.
Investigators canvassing the rugged desert terrain near Nancy Guthrie’s homeCredit: REUTERS
 

Three women posing for a picture in a crowded theater.
Nancy Guthrie (middle) and her daughters, Savannah (left) and Annie Guthrie (right)Credit: Instagram/savannahguthrie
Investigators believe Nancy Guthrie disappeared sometime after 2:28am on February 1 after her pacemaker disconnected from her phone, which was left behind.

In the days since her family reported her missing, Pima County and FBI investigators have conducted repeated searches at both Nancy’s and her daughter Annie’s homes, which are located about 4 miles from each other.

The mounting pressure to locate Nancy has reportedly led to clashes between Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos and the FBI.

Nanos has reportedly blocked federal agents from obtaining key evidence, including gloves and other DNA found inside Nancy’s home, according to Fox News.

Read more on Nancy Guthrie

BEHIND THE MASK

Ex-FBI agent breaks down ‘homeless’ theory clues from Nancy Guthrie footage

Federal investigators have reportedly asked Nanos for the items to be processed at the FBI’s national crime laboratory in Quantico, Virginia.

However, Nanos sent the evidence for testing at a private lab in Florida, according to the outlet.

Nanos disputed the claims, telling NBC affiliate KVOA that the reports were “not even close to the truth.”

But it has been Nancy’s unlit, secluded desert neighborhood that has made the investigation challenging for law enforcement.

Most read in Entertainment

An image collage containing 1 images, Image 1 shows Darius Rucker kissing his fiancée, who is showing off her engagement ring

ENGAGEMENT BLISS

Rock legend, 59, to marry stunning influencer, 33, after a year of dating

JEN’S AGONY

I tried to have baby for 20 years says Jennifer Aniston

An image collage containing 2 images, Image 1 shows Jason Patric with a gray scruffy beard and glasses, in a black polo shirt and blue pants, with his hands clasped in front of him, Image 2 shows Jason Patric, 59, with a grey scruffy beard and sunglasses, walking with his lookalike son Gus, 15, in Los Angeles

double take

80s movie heartthrob and nepo baby unrecognizable in LA – can you guess who?

STAR GONE

Paul Newman’s daughter Susan dies aged 72 as tributes pour in for Beatles actress

Secluded area

The U.S. Sun was on the ground in Tucson and experienced first-hand the rugged stretch of desert terrain that surrounds Nancy’s home and those of her neighbors.

Nancy’s property is located on a roughly mile-long road with no street lights or cameras, dense vegetation, and away from hotels and commercial businesses.

The community is roughly 44.6 miles of desert, according to the Arizona Republic.

The affluent area is popular for hikers due to its mountainous terrain and hilly roads.

Red brick house with a front arched door, flanked by agave plants and rocks.
The front entrance of Nancy Guthrie’s homeCredit: Getty Images
 

A young man in a fleece jacket and button-up shirt standing outdoors with desert plants in the background.
I spent a week in Tucson covering the suspected kidnapping of Nancy Guthrie and was shocked by the rural desert terrain investigators had to comb throughCredit: The U.S. Sun
 

Two men walk along a rocky path between desert scrub and trees.
Law enforcement agents check vegetation areas around Nancy Guthrie’s homeCredit: AP Photo/Ty ONeil

Unlit roads

At night and without a flashlight, it is impossible to see where you’re walking or what is in front of you.

Locals, who for decades have called the Catalina Foothills home, relayed to The U.S. Sun that the lack of lights in the community is to protect astronomical research at various observatories in Tucson.

A neighbor told The U.S. Sun that homeowners in the area are encouraged not to have landscape lights on their properties.

“If you have lights, landscape lights on your house, don’t point them up. You want them to point at the wall or down on the ground, not the sky,” said the woman, who asked not to be named.

The sound of chirping crickets and coyotes howling in the night is the only sign of life when you’re standing on the dark remote roads.

The same neighbor told The U.S. Sun that at night she often hears barking and whooping from coyotes around the neighborhood.

“Sometimes we have bobcats. But overall, we don’t have a lot of noise,” she added.

Off-road homes

Unlike traditional neighborhoods where homes are situated closely to one another, the layout of the Catalina Foothills is starkly different.

There are no sidewalks, and neighboring most homes is a desert environment with skin-tearing cacti and thick shrubs.

Most of the residential homes are spaced out off main roads, only have a ground level, and are tucked in behind long driveways.

Due to the dense shrubs, the darkness of unlit roads, and where many of the homes sit; even if doorbell camera footage is available from neighbors, they would not capture activity on local streets.

The lack of surveillance cameras on main roads has forced local and federal investigators to go door-to-door to nearby residences for any home security camera footage they may have.

An FBI agent with red hair, wearing a blue shirt and green pants, stands on rocky, brush-covered terrain.
A member of the FBI surveils the desert area around Nancy’s residenceCredit: Getty Images
 

A group of people and news crew gather on a road in the desert at night, with bright lights illuminating them, and a memorial of flowers in the foreground.
Lights from vehicles and news cameras illuminate the dark road where Nancy Guthrie livesCredit: Getty Images
 

Two people place flowers at a makeshift memorial for Nancy Guthrie, including a sign that reads "Dear Guthrie Family, Your neighbors stand."
People deliver flowers to a makeshift memorial at the entrance to Nancy’s residenceCredit: Getty Images
 

A search and rescue worker in a black shirt and khaki pants crouching inside a dark, corrugated pipe, shining a flashlight on the sandy ground.
An investigator looks inside a culvert in the Catalina Foothills neighborhood

Desperate search

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department has laid out a timeline of what they believe were Nancy’s final hours before she was allegedly kidnapped.

On the afternoon of January 31, Nancy took an Uber to her daughter Annie and her son-in-law Tommaso Cionni’s house for dinner.

At 9:48pm that evening, Sheriff Nanos said Cionni dropped off his mother-in-law at her home.

In the early hours of February 1, Nancy’s doorbell camera disconnected at 1:47am.

At 2:12am, software from one of Nancy’s cameras on her property detected a person.

Then, at 2:28am, Nancy’s pacemaker disconnected from her phone.

By 11:56am, Nancy’s family arrived at her home after being alerted by a friend that their mother missed Sunday mass.

After not being able to locate Nancy, the family calls Pima County deputies to report her missing.

Roughly 10 minutes later, deputies arrive at the scene and uncover “concerning” evidence, including a trail of blood on the porch outside the home and Nancy’s missing doorbell camera.

The FBI has since obtained the doorbell camera footage from the night of Nancy’s disappearance, which showed a man wearing a ski mask using a plant from the lawn to obscure the camera’s lens.

RECOMMENDED STORIES

Federal investigators described the man as average build, between 5’9′ and 5’10’, wearing a black, 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack.

The FBI is offering $100,000 for any information leading to the man’s arrest.

Aerial view of homes in the desert landscape of Tucson, Arizona.
An aerial view shows the home of Nancy Guthrie
 

Collage of two Nest camera images of a person wearing a ski mask, the left showing the person standing outdoors at night, the right showing a close-up of the person holding flowers.
Authorities are looking for a masked man who was caught on Nancy Guthrie’s Nest doorbell camera on the night of her disappearanceCredit: FBI

Timeline of Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance

Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today show co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, disappeared from her home on February 1, 2026.

Timeline:

January 31: Nancy is last seen by her family

5:32pm: Nancy travels to her daughter’s home for dinner, about 11 minutes from her own house.
9:48pm: Family members drop off Nancy Guthrie at her home in Tucson. Her garage door closes two minutes later.

February 1: Nancy is reported missing and a search begins

1:47am: Nancy’s doorbell camera disconnects
2:12am: Camera software detects a person moving in range of the camera. There is no video, and Nancy does not have a storage description.
2:28am: Nancy’s pacemaker app disconnects from her phone, which is later found still at her house.
Around 11am: A parishioner at Nancy’s church calls the mom’s children and says she failed to show up for service.
11:56am: Family members arrive at Nancy’s house to check on her.
12:03pm: The family calls 911 to report Nancy missing.
8:55pm: The Pima County Sheriff’s Office gives its first press conference and reveals some clues found at Nancy’s home caused “grave concern.” Sheriff Chris Nanos says helicopters, drones, and infrared cameras are all being utilized in the search.

February 2: Search crews pull back. Nancy’s home is considered a crime scene. Savannah releases a statement thanking supporters for their prayers, which her co-hosts read on Today.
February 3: A trail of blood is pictured outside Nancy’s home, where there were reportedly signs of forced entry. Nanos admits they have no suspects, no leads, and no videos that could lead to Nancy’s recovery. He and the FBI beg for more tips and accounts.
February 4, 8pm: Savannah and her siblings release a heartbreaking video directed at their mother’s abductors asking for proof she is alive and saying they’re willing to work with them to get her back.
February 5: FBI offers $50,000 reward for information on the case.

5pm: First ransom demand deadline for millions in Bitcoin passes. Guthrie family releases demand to speak “directly” to the kidnappers, saying, “We want to talk to you and we are waiting for contact.”

February 9, 5pm: Second ransom demand deadline, reportedly with “much more serious” conditions.

Comments

BOMBSHELL REVEAL: Doctors have just released the findings on the youngest survivor, and the room went silent. 🚨📺  This major turn in the case is blowing the original theories wide open. What was found during the examination tonight contradicts everything the suspects claimed. The youngest victim is now the key to unmasking the truth. 🌑🔍  See the “Medical Evidence” and the doctors’ official statement in the comments. 👇
“THANK GOD WE DIDN’T FIND ANYTHING.” 🚨 The search for 2-year-old Genesis Reid in Alabama reaches a fever pitch—but a chilling discovery about her last sighting is shaking the community to its core. 🌑⚖️  Was she taken at 3 a.m. in her Minnie Mouse pajamas, or is the truth much darker? The gap between the mother’s story and the neighbors’ testimony is growing by the hour. 🔍🛡️  See the latest evidence found at the scene and the “Day 3” search update in the comments below.