HT10. Nancy Guthrie: He Paid in Cash at Walmart — But the Receipt WILL LEAD the FBI Straight to Him

More than five weeks after an 84-year-old woman was abducted from her Arizona home, federal and local investigators are pursuing critical forensic leads — while her family refuses to give up hope.

TUCSON, Arizona — In the quiet, upscale neighborhood of Catalina Foothills, just north of Tucson, the mornings used to be unremarkable. Residents woke early, walked dogs past towering saguaro cacti, and went about their routines against the backdrop of the Santa Catalina Mountains. Nancy Guthrie was one of them — an 84-year-old grandmother who had called Tucson home for more than five decades, known to her neighbors, cherished by her family, and faithfully present every Sunday morning for her church’s virtual livestream service.

On the morning of February 1, 2026, she did not appear.

Nancy Guthrie — the mother of NBC News journalist and Today co-anchor Savannah Guthrie — was reported missing from her home in Catalina Foothills, Arizona. Evidence recovered at the residence indicated she had been taken against her will, and Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos stated that he believed she had been abducted.

What followed has become one of the most closely watched missing persons investigations in recent American history — drawing federal resources, a national media spotlight, presidential attention, and more than 40,000 tips from a public desperate to help bring an elderly woman home.

As of this writing, Nancy Guthrie has not been found.

The Night She Disappeared

Nancy Guthrie: He Paid in Cash at Walmart — But the Receipt WILL LEAD the FBI  Straight to Him - YouTube

Guthrie was last seen at her home in the Catalina Foothills on the evening of Saturday, January 31, 2026. She was dropped off by her son-in-law, Tommaso Cioni — who is married to her daughter Annie — at approximately 9:50 p.m. Cioni is the last known person to have seen her. Guthrie did not arrive for a scheduled livestream of a church service the following morning, prompting concern. A member of her church contacted the family to report that she had not appeared as expected. Relatives went to her home around 11 a.m. to check on her, searched the house and surrounding property, and found no sign of her.

Around noon, the family called 911 and reported Guthrie missing to the Pima County Sheriff’s Department. Deputies responding to the residence noted that Guthrie’s personal belongings, including her phone and other essential items, were still inside the home.

The most chilling evidence came from a device most people install for peace of mind. Security footage retrieved from Nancy’s doorbell camera recorded a masked individual lingering on her doorstep in the early morning hours prior to her suspected abduction. Nancy Guthrie’s pacemaker stopped syncing with her Apple devices at 2:28 a.m. — a timestamp that has since become a focal point of the investigation.

The Suspect: What Investigators Know

The FBI released the first physical description of a male suspect: average build, with an approximate height of 5-foot-9 or 5-foot-10. He was masked, gloved, and equipped — arriving at an elderly woman’s door in the dead of night with what appeared to be deliberate preparation.

Among the most forensically significant pieces of evidence is what the suspect was carrying. The FBI said the backpack was a black, 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack model, which CBS News learned is sold exclusively at Walmart. Sources with knowledge of the investigation told CBS News that law enforcement officials reviewed video at one Walmart location in Tucson.

A gun holster visible in surveillance footage taken outside the home may also offer important leads to investigators. The holster appears consistent with a brand sold at select Walmart stores for approximately $10. According to Fox News Digital, the mask and certain clothing items visible in the footage are also believed to have been purchased at Walmart.

The significance of this retail trail is hard to overstate. Walmart maintains comprehensive surveillance systems covering every entrance, aisle, checkout lane, and parking lot. Every transaction is logged with a time stamp, store location, and product code. The exclusive nature of the Ozark Trail backpack — unavailable at any other major retailer — means investigators can narrow their records search to a single corporate database across Arizona stores.

The sheriff’s department also said DNA that did not belong to Nancy Guthrie or those in close contact with her had been collected from her residence, and investigators are working to identify who it belongs to. Investigators also recently found a pair of black gloves that are being tested for DNA.

A Deliberate and Premeditated Act

Search for Nancy Guthrie hits Day 16

Everything about the circumstances of Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance points to planning. Former FBI profiler Gregg McCrary said this appears to be a targeted crime: “He just didn’t knock on the door randomly and bump into Ms. Guthrie.” McCrary said residents should think about what they observed both before and after the abduction, and that if anyone was fixated on or talking about the Guthries, that would be significant.

Investigators are reviewing a damaged utility box discovered near Nancy Guthrie’s home in Tucson. The equipment could be connected to a reported internet outage in the area around the time Guthrie vanished on February 1. The outage may have disrupted nearby home surveillance cameras, and Guthrie’s neighbors told NewsNation their home security footage from that night is missing or marked “not available.” Authorities have reportedly asked residents about unusual connectivity problems around February 1.

The picture this paints is of someone who did not act on impulse. Someone who knew the neighborhood, knew the property, and had taken steps to limit the digital evidence that could expose them.

Ransom Notes and Unanswered Questions

A ransom letter sent to several media outlets, including TMZ and CNN affiliate KOLD-TV, demanded millions of dollars in bitcoin for Guthrie’s return. The note included two deadlines — FBI Special Agent in Charge Heith Janke confirmed the first deadline fell on Thursday and a second deadline on Monday. Both deadlines passed without a confirmed exchange.

Multiple media outlets reported receiving ransom notes in connection with Guthrie’s disappearance, and efforts were underway to determine if they were sent by individuals holding Guthrie. Authorities neither confirmed nor denied the validity of the notes.

Family appeals on social media have not yet produced any confirmed proof of life. Sheriff Nanos told CBS News: “There has been no sign of life, but I’m gonna tell you too, there has been no sign of death.”

The Family’s Vigil

Ex-FBI official flags possible scam as third alleged Nancy Guthrie letter  emerges | 930 WFMD Free Talk

Throughout this ordeal, Savannah Guthrie has become the face of a family in quiet anguish — conducting herself with a composure that has moved millions of viewers even as she stepped away from the morning show she has anchored for years.

The case drew international attention, with Savannah Guthrie suspending her broadcasting duties, including coverage of the 2026 Winter Olympics, to participate in the ongoing search.

The family announced they are offering up to $1 million for information leading to her recovery, and Savannah Guthrie also announced a $500,000 donation to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, saying she hoped the attention given to her family would extend to others still in limbo.

The total reward currently stands at $1.2 million.

Savannah Guthrie visited a memorial outside of her mother’s home in Tucson on Monday, marking one month since Nancy Guthrie disappeared. She was joined by her sister Annie and her brother-in-law, Tommaso Cioni. The three were seen hugging one another as they added flowers to a growing tribute near Nancy Guthrie’s mailbox.

In a video posted to social media, Savannah addressed whoever is responsible directly: “It is never too late to do the right thing. You are not lost or alone.” The measured empathy of that appeal was noted by multiple behavioral analysts, who suggested it reflected advice from the FBI’s communication specialists — language designed to keep an elderly woman alive in the hands of whoever is holding her.

The Investigation: Where Things Stand

One month into the search, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos told NBC News that “investigators are definitely closer” in the search for Nancy Guthrie. “I’ve said this from the beginning: I have full faith, full confidence, they’re going to solve this,” Nanos said, adding that there have been “thousands” of leads since Guthrie disappeared.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department has maintained approximately 300 to 400 personnel consistently assigned to the case since it was initially launched.

The FBI has reduced the number of personnel in Tucson and relocated its command post to Phoenix to work the case from there, though agents remain in Tucson and continue to partner with the Pima County Sheriff’s Department. The move has not been characterized as a sign that investigators are reducing their commitment to the case.

Discussion surrounding the active search intensified after individuals connected to the case spotted a suspicious item being recovered from a river near Nancy’s residence. Official investigators have not yet commented on this reported discovery. Additionally, cadaver dogs used earlier in the investigation are not currently being deployed as the search continues — one possible indicator, according to experts, that investigators believe Nancy may have been taken across the border into Mexico.

A Community That Has Not Forgotten

A $10 Walmart gun holster could help identify suspect in Nancy Guthrie case

As Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance stretches into its second month, it has drawn renewed attention to other families in Tucson who have been waiting years — sometimes decades — for answers about their own missing loved ones. Nearly 30,000 children were reported missing in the United States in 2024 alone, according to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.

The Guthrie case, by virtue of Savannah’s national platform, has placed a spotlight on the broader reality of missing persons in America — and on the families who wait in an uncertainty that most people cannot imagine.

Nancy Ellen Long Guthrie was born on January 27, 1942, in Fort Wright, Kentucky. She has lived in the Tucson area for more than five decades, having moved there with her family in the early 1970s. She was married to Charles Guthrie until his death at age 49 while on a mining exploration trip in Mexico in 1988. She has three children: Savannah, Annie, and Camron.

She has grandchildren who call her beloved. She has a congregation that has prayed for her every Sunday since February 1. She has a community that has placed flowers at her mailbox and watched the road that leads to her door with a grief that has not faded.

How to Help

If you have any information about the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, authorities urge you to contact the FBI immediately.

FBI Tip Line: 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) Online Tips: tips.fbi.gov Pima County Sheriff’s Tip Line: 520-351-4900 Total Reward: Up to $1.2 million for information leading to her recovery

 

Sources: Wikipedia (Disappearance of Nancy Guthrie), CBS News, CNN, Fox News Digital, Yahoo News/Associated Press, WRAL.com, Irish Star. All facts in this article have been verified through multiple independent media sources.