DISTURBING DEVELOPMENT
Authorities have identified a man arrested outside Nancy Guthrie’s home after allegedly driving past the property 50 to 100 times — behavior police describe as “weird” and now under close scrutiny 
Authorities Identify ‘Weird’ Man Arrested Outside of Nancy Guthrie’s Home After He Drove Past the Property ’50 to 100 Times’
savannahguthrie/Instagram
Aman has been arrested outside of Nancy Guthrie‘s Arizona home on DUI charges—after he was seen driving past the property “50 to 100 times” while looking at a photo of the missing 84-year-old on his phone.
Antonio De Jesus Pena-Campos, 34, was seen in a blue vehicle making his way past the $1 million dwelling multiple times on the evening on Feb. 26, according to NewsNation correspondent Brian Entin, who shared footage of the moment the driver was stopped and questioned by authorities.
“It’s probably nothing but, like, it is weird. There’s some just like some creepy people that come by,” Entin said in his video.
He added: “There are some weird people that show up out here. There’s this guy in this car right here who literally drove by like 50 to 100 times, very slowly. It was just weird. He would go right by the memorial [outside of Nancy’s home] and he just kept stopping, literally 50 to 100 times tonight.”
Entin further alleged that a member of the media “tried to talk to him and saw that he had a picture of Nancy Guthrie on his phone,” which he was reportedly looking at as he drove by.
According to the NewsNation correspondent, Pena-Campos was later taken into custody after failing a roadside sobriety test.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Department later confirmed the arrest in an email statement, however, the spokesperson noted that Pena-Campos has no connection to Nancy’s case.
NewsNation correspondent Brian Entin captured footage of the moment Antonio De Jesus Pena-Campos was stopped and questioned by authorities.YouTube/Brian Entin
“Shortly before 8:00 p.m. on February 26, 2026, deputies arrested 34-year-old Antonio De Jesus Pena-Campos in front of Nancy Guthrie’s home on misdemeanor DUI charges. This arrest is not related to the Guthrie investigation,” the statement read.
A spokesperson also reiterated officials’ commitment to the case, adding that it is “refocusing resources” to those detectives actively working on the investigation.
“This remains an active investigation and will continue until Nancy Guthrie is located or all leads have been exhausted,” the statement read. “The Pima County Sheriff’s Department is refocusing resources to detectives specifically assigned to this case.
“As leads are developed and resolved, resource allocation may fluctuate. PCSD will maintain a patrol presence in the Guthrie neighborhood.”
Hours after that arrest was made, Nancy’s daughter, “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, reshared a video clip she previously posted on Feb. 24, in which she offered a $1 million reward for any information that leads to her mother’s return.
In the new cut of the video, Savannah stresses the fact that all submissions and tips can be made anonymously, noting that lack of identification will not prevent a person from claiming the money.
“Please bring her home,” she wrote in the caption, adding: “You can be anonymous.”
She also shared a clip from NBC News in which a correspondent detailed exactly how the payment of the reward will be processed, noting that it will “likely” be paid in cash.
Should someone provide information that leads to Nancy’s recovery, that person can meeting with a representative of the Guthrie family at a “neutral location,” where they can use a seven-digit pin attached to their tip in order to claim the reward.
The update comes one day after Fox News claimed that one of Nancy’s neighbors had obtained footage from their Ring security camera, which shows around a dozen vehicles driving down a road near to the missing mother of three’s home on the night of her abduction.
According to the outlet, the vehicles were caught on camera between the hours of 12 a.m. and 6 a.m. on Feb. 1, the same day that a masked and armed intruder was caught on camera approaching Nancy’s front door.
Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas told Fox News that authorities had not asked them for the camera footage, noting that they live around half a mile outside of the 2-mile zone that was being canvassed by the FBI and the Pima County Sheriff’s Department.
However, they have since notified authorities about the footage.
Hours earlier, it was revealed that the FBI reportedly made the decision to pull almost all of the agents assigned to Nancy’s case out of Tucson and return them to the agency’s Phoenix headquarters—amid rumors that her daughter is preparing to leave Arizona and fly home to New York.
As the search for Nancy nears the end of its fourth week, law enforcement sources told ABC News that the majority of agents who were sent to work on the ground near the 84-year-old’s home will now head back to the closest FBI headquarters.
While some agents will remain on the ground, the rest will continue their work on the case from the Phoenix office and it has been made clear that this development should not be viewed as a sign that the investigation is over or that authorities are any less hopeful about finding Nancy.
“The FBI will keep agents in Tucson and continue to partner with the Pima County Sheriff’s Department, but many agents are returning to Phoenix to work the case from there,” the outlet reported.




