A BIood-Stained Glove Found Near Nancy Guthrie’s Home? Nearly 20 days after Nancy Guthrie vanished, a chilling discovery is raising new questions. A Tucson couple says they found a torn black glove — stained with what appeared to be dried blood — less than a mile from the 84-year-old’s Catalina Foothills home. The glove was lying in the desert. Blood near the wrist. More on the finger. And beneath it, what looked like a drop of dried blood on a rock. They say they didn’t touch a thing.

 Tucson couple says they found glove near Nancy Guthrie’s home


– The investigation into the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie continues to unfold, with neighbors in the area expressing ongoing fear. Authorities are not ruling out the possibility of multiple individuals being involved in her disappearance.

The FBI is actively fielding calls around the clock via the 1-800-CALL-FBI tip line and reviewing online submissions. A reward of up to $100,000 is being offered by the agency for information leading to Nancy’s location or the arrest and conviction of those involved. Additionally, 88-CRIME is offering a reward of $202,500.

News 4 Tucson’s Monica Garcia spoke with a couple who said they found a glove that appeared to have blood on it less than a mile away from Nancy Guthrie’s Catalina Foothills home. This comes as the search for Nancy, the 84-year-old mother of TODAY show co-host Savannah Guthrie, is in day 20.

A couple, who requested to remain anonymous, reported finding suspicious items less than a mile from the neighborhood near Campbell Avenue nine days ago on Feb. 11. They noticed a black glove in the desert that appeared to have blood on it.

“Sure enough it was a black glove in the desert it appeared to have looked like it was ripped. It also appeared to like it looked like it had blood on it. The blood appeared to be towards the wrist side of the glove and on the pointer finger. It looked like this was like used for something that could’ve possibly been what they were looking for,” the wife said.

Less than 10 feet away, they found a second glove. They refrained from touching the items and promptly contacted authorities.

“And also from the glove it looked like a blood drop on a rock underneath the glove was like dried blood or something. We didn’t move it or touch it. We immediately were like we have to do something. So I was like I will call the sheriff department,” the husband said.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department released a statement on Friday saying, investigators are actively pursuing leads in the Nancy Guthrie case and are not ruling out the possibility that more than one person may be involved. This comes as the search for Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of TODAY show co-host Savannah Guthrie, is in its twentieth day.

Concerned about the forecasted rain, they also dialed 911. Investigators responded, questioned them and remained on-site until about 2 a.m.

The sheriff confirmed that if the gloves were taken as evidence, they would be tested. The department stated, “We cannot confirm at this time. Detectives and agents have collected multiple gloves from the area and analysis is part of the investigation.”

The Sheriff’s 911 Communications Center continues to receive hundreds of daily calls related to this case. From Feb. 1 through the 19, the department received more than 32,000 calls, a significant increase from nearly 22,000 during the same period last year. Investigators urge the public to submit only actionable tips to keep emergency lines available.

Stay with News 4 Tucson for updates on the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.

🚨 A ripped black glove. What looks like dried blood. And it was found less than a mile from Nancy Guthrie’s home in the Catalina Foothills.  As the search for the 84-year-old mother of Savannah Guthrie enters day 20, a Tucson couple says they discovered not one — but two suspicious gloves in the desert near Campbell Avenue. They didn’t touch a thing. They called authorities immediately. Investigators stayed on scene until 2 a.m.  Now officials aren’t ruling out multiple people being involved. The Federal Bureau of Investigation is fielding tips 24/7, with rewards totaling over $300,000 for information leading to answers.  Thousands of calls. Growing fear in the neighborhood. And a mystery that just took a chilling turn.  What really happened to Nancy Guthrie? 👀
The FBI is working around the clock, fielding tips through 1-800-CALL-FBI and offering up to $100,000 for information leading to Nancy’s location or an arrest. 88-CRIME has added another $202,500 reward.  Meanwhile, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department says multiple gloves have been collected in the area — and analysis is underway.  Is this glove connected? Or just another haunting coincidence?  With more than 32,000 calls flooding dispatch lines since Feb. 1, authorities are urging the public to submit only credible tips.  But as rain threatened to wash away potential evidence, one thing is clear:  The mystery surrounding Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance is only deepening.
Now, the Texas Department of Public Safety Ranger Division is leading an active investigation.  Was it self-defense in a chaotic, split-second crisis?  Why wasn’t federal involvement disclosed earlier?  And has the agent been placed on administrative leave?  Authorities say the injured agent suffered a knee injury. Officials insist the shooting was justified. But as more details emerge, scrutiny is intensifying over what really happened in those tense moments on one of Texas’ busiest spring break weekends.  A crowded island. A vehicle surging forward. An agent on the hood.  And a shooting that’s only now coming fully into focus.
Among those lost: sisters Liz Clabaugh and Caroline Sekar, along with Carrie Atkin, Danielle Keatley, Kate Morse, and Kate Vitt — women whose families say they were passionate, skilled, and deeply connected by the mountains they loved.  Now investigators are asking hard questions. Avalanche warnings had been issued. The tour company had posted cautions. What happened in those final moments? Were there signs no one could see?  Experts say survival chances plummet after 15 minutes under the snow.  For the families, there are still “many unanswered questions.”  For the backcountry community, there’s something even harder: how do you return to the place that once made you feel most alive — when it’s also where you lost the people you love?
Powerful winds may push ocean water inland, raising the threat of coastal flooding from New Jersey through Long Island and into southern New England — with peak impacts lining up with high tide.  This could be New York City’s first foot-plus snowstorm in more than five years.  The forecast track has shifted for days. Now it’s locked in.  The question isn’t whether this storm will hit — it’s how hard.  Are you ready for what’s coming Sunday night?
Nancy Guthrie — mother of TODAY co-anchor Savannah Guthrie — was last seen January 31, dropped off at home just before 10 p.m. Authorities believe she was taken in the middle of the night.  No motive. No named suspect. Not yet.  But behind the scenes, the pressure is building — and investigators say the pieces are starting to come together.  What really happened inside that house after 1:47 a.m.?
Six survived. Eight were confirmed dead. One is still missing.  Among the victims: a tight-knit circle of women — mothers, sisters, lifelong friends — described by their families as “passionate, skilled skiers who cherished time together in the mountains.” They were experienced. They were trained. They were fully equipped with avalanche gear.  They had spent two nights in the Frog Lake huts before beginning their return. Somewhere along the way, something went catastrophically wrong.  Rescuers deployed Sno-Cats and helicopters. Survivors built makeshift shelters from tarps and, in a heartbreaking act of courage, uncovered three of their friends before help arrived. The rest were found beneath the snow.  Now investigators are asking difficult questions: Why did the group choose that route? Did shifting snow conditions create a hidden trap? Was this tragedy unavoidable — or preventable?
Carrie Atkin of Truckee-Tahoe. Liz Clabaugh of Boise — who was skiing alongside her sister. What was meant to be time together in the snow turned into a tragedy that has shaken families, friends, and entire communities from Marin to Truckee. Even Governor Gavin Newsom called some of the victims family friends. In small mountain towns where peaks like Castle Peak frame daily life, this loss feels painfully close to home.
💔 “Don’t Forget Me Today…” — Dad Recalls 12-Year-Old Kylie’s Chilling Last Words Before Tumbler Ridge School Tragedy  Lance Younge says he walked his daughter Kylie to school like any other morning, never imagining it would be the last time he’d see her alive. The 12-year-old was later k!lled in a devastating school sh00ting that has left the small Canadian town shattered.  But it’s one quiet sentence she said before leaving that now feels almost impossible to ignore… and her father says it keeps replaying in his mind.