All Guthrie siblings and spouses officially cleared as suspects in Nancy Guthrie’s kidnapping: sheriff
The Guthrie family — including all the siblings and spouses — have been officially cleared as suspects in the ongoing Nancy Guthrie kidnapping case.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos confirmed the news Monday in a statement, adding that “The family has been nothing but cooperative and gracious and are victims in this case.”
Nanos — who has been heading up the investigation, now in its third week — also hit back at “cruel” speculation that family members could have been involved in the baffling disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s 84-year-old mother.

All siblings and spouses have been cleared in the ongoing Nancy Guthrie kidnapping case. via REUTERS

Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos made the announcement on Monday. Instagram / Savannah Guthrie
Explore More
“The Guthrie family are victims plain and simple,” he added.
The announcement means the “Today” show co-host, her brother Camron, and her sister, Annie, are all cleared, as well as Annie’s husband, Tommaso Cioni, who was the last person to see her alive.
Nanos previously told the Daily Mail that he and his team of investigators want to avoid putting a “mark on somebody who could be completely innocent.”
“If he is guilty, if he’s the one who did it, and we’re able to prove that, then at that time jump on it, but don’t come out of nowhere with this,” Nanos told the DailyMail on Sunday of rampant online speculation about Cioni.

On Sunday, Nanos addressed ongoing speculation surrounding Savannah’s brother-in-law, Tommaso Cioni. Annie Guthrie / Facebook

“If he is guilty, if he’s the one who did it, and we’re able to prove that, then at that time jump on it, but don’t come out of nowhere with this,” Nanos said in comments to the Daily Mail on Sunday. Annie Guthrie / Facebook
Want more celebrity and pop culture news?
Start your day with Page Six Daily.
“I understand the pundits are out there,” Nanos added. “They’re gonna say, well, he’s the last one to see her alive. We understand that stuff.”
“But, my goodness, you’re putting a mark on somebody who could be completely innocent. And more important than that, he’s family.”
Cioni became the target of speculation connected to Nancy’s disappearance from her Tucson home after being the last known person to see her before she was reported missing on Feb. 1. She failed to attend church that day, following a family outing the prior evening.
Since then, Savannah and her siblings, Annie and Camron, have repeatedly taken to social media to plead for their mother’s safe return.

Nancy was reported missing from her Tucson home on Feb. 1. Getty Images

Annie Guthrie’s husband, Tommaso Cioni, became an early target of online speculation after being the last known person to see Nancy. Annie Guthrie / facebook
No persons of interest or suspects have been identified yet in the ongoing case, which has now stretched into its third week — though on Thursday, FBI Phoenix shared via X that a person seen on security footage at Nancy’s home is a male who stands at around 5-foot-9 or 5-foot-10, and has an “average build.”
They also increased the reward for relevant information in locating Nancy from $50,000 to $100,000.
On Monday, president Trump vowed the death penalty if Nancy isn’t found alive. The commander-in-chief told The Post that the suspected kidnappers would face “very, very severe” and “the most severe” federal punishment in the event that she’s not found alive.
When asked if that meant the Department of Justice would ask for the death penalty, Trump told The Post, “The most, yeah — that’s true.”

Savannah and her siblings, Camron and Annie, have released multiple social media videos pleading for their mother’s return. Instagram/savannahguthrie

No persons of interest or suspects have officially been identified in Nancy’s disappearance. Instagram/savannahguthrie
Trump previously wrote that he was “deploying all resources to get her mother home safely” in a Feb. 4 Truth Social post.
Meanwhile, the “Today” show co-host — who has stepped away from the show for the “foreseeable future,” an NBC source previously told Page Six — once again took to Instagram with another emotional plea to the suspected captors over the weekend.
“I wanted to say to whoever has her, or who knows where she is, that, it’s never too late,” Savannah said in part, in the latest clip. “And you’re not lost, or alone, and it is never too late to do the right thing.”



