AZ Nancy Guthrie, 84, (mother of TODAY Show host Savannah Guthrie) missing - last seen in the Catalina foothills area on Jan 31, 2026

  • #6,121
IMO the only way family could be involved with this, and it have a purely financial motive like inheritance or property, is if she were left in a location where she would actually be found or someone associated with them facilitated a ransom demand (in which case she would likely be alive and medicated). But family can't get an inheritance or claim someone's property without a death certificate, and the state wouldn't declare her deceased for years without a body. So if they were involved it would not be in their financial (inheritance) interest to take her away from the scene at all, and if they did take her away not to put her in a place that she couldn't be found easily.

This is why I'm not thinking family financial motive.

JMO.
That's an excellent point, Slim. Maybe she had a substantial life insurance policy?

Uh, strike that. The family would have to produce a death certificate. Lol
 
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  • #6,122
I’m new here. Los Angeles Times said she took an Uber to dinner and that family took her home.

Wondering if LE investigated or interviewed the Uber driver.

Article
The chief said yesterday at the presser that they talked to the Uber driver as well as many other people.

jmo
 
  • #6,123
Ok, to be fair. My Mom literally lives down the street from me. Sometimes I call or text her and she doesn't answer, which is ODD. I will call her cell, call her house... maybe give her a few minutes (maybe she is in the shower? maybe in the bathroom and didn't take phone lol ) I will give her some time, but after about 30 minutes or so, yep, I would go over to make sure everything was okay. My timeline would be very similar.

We don't know if something like this has happened before, where she doesn't answer right away but does after 10-15 minutes or so.

There also seems to be some question about someone calling the family. Do we have confirmation of this? It was not in the timeline from LE yesterday.
I've done this with my mom, too, prior to her going into memory care.
 
  • #6,124
Your grandmother sounds awesome! I don't think anyone is implying that NG is incapable of taking an Uber, but I can't think of many 84 year olds, especially women, who are comfortable doing that. Having said that, I can't see how her decision to do that has much to do with the case, other than looking at the Uber driver, which they've apparently done.
It’s a way to “confirm” that she got to the home of “family” for dinner, and a reason for “family” to say that she “got home” because “family” drove her there.

moo.
 
  • #6,125
BBM. again: we.don't.know that they took care of her. I've not seen that confirmed anywhere. Just because they lived nearby does NOT equate to taking care of her.
Maybe they grocery shopped for her, took her to doc appts, visited, took her to get new comfy shoes when she asked. My mom does stuff like that for an old nun in town. She’s not changing bed pans or anything. Just checks in on her and does what she asks and runs a few errands for her and sometimes with her
 
  • #6,126
This post kind of contradicts a post of mine a couple back but it has also stuck out to me that right since the get go the Sheriff has said multiple times that he believes NG is alive. He has framed it as a kidnapping right from the beginning. There’s got to be something they have that has made him think that from the word go. Maybe there was a note at the scene? From the family’s videos they have said the kidnapper has not contacted them directly at all so that makes me think a note was never sent to them
@Absoluterubbish.... bbm above. You have brought up a really, really great point. It has been reported the slider/French door
to the backyard was wide open. Wouldn't it be crazy (or just another Fargo-like mishap) if a note was left on the kitchen table and it blew off in the morning. I did some checking and guess what? The wind was 3 times stronger that morning than the normal 5MPH. I know some of my ideas are "far-fetched" but haven't we seen some incredible happenings before in some of these cases?
On the morning of Saturday, January 31, 2026, Tucson experienced breezy to gusty easterly winds, with speeds ranging between 10 to 15 mph, according to reports updated on that morning.
 
  • #6,127
But if someone knew that there wasn't a subscription why would they even bother to take it? Maybe they weren't aware that it didn't save, but still.
Many people let their subscriptions lapse. They might miss a reminder text.
It doesn’t seem like most workers or even family would know this except whoever helps with Nancy’s bills. And it still might slip, because paying yearly doesn’t come up often.
 
  • #6,128
  • #6,129
I’m new here. Los Angeles Times said she took an Uber to dinner and that family took her home.

Wondering if LE investigated or interviewed the Uber driver.

Article
They probably did, but I would think he/she was cleared. No one knew about the Uber ride until the PC yesterday. If the Uber driver was a suspect, Uber driver would not have been mentioned in the PC.
 
  • #6,130
I’m curious about the scene at the front door. It appears there are dried/dead flowers on the ground by the door and a large empty vase in the corner. I wonder if there was a spare key in that vase and it was emptied of the flowers to get the key.
 
  • #6,131
My gut tells me that family member(s) are responsible for Nancy’s disappearance. My inclination would be that the ransom notes are unrelated because it’s unlikely that a family member would have (or know someone who has) the capability to send the notes from an undiscoverable IP address. Then again, I suppose it’s possible that that the FBI does know the source of the ransom notes, but is building a case beyond the scenes, that we are unaware of. MOO.
How do you account for the fact that the ransom note mentioned the location of the watch or other inside details? I mean, I guess they could have made a good guess... or it could've been placed into the fridge by the captor and that's where it was located. Hypothetical ofc. MOO
 
  • #6,132
I'm confused about the 2 minutes between the garage door opening then shutting.
This data shows that NG entered through the garage and the door was closed right away, yes?

So either whoever dropped her off at 9:48 ish did not enter with her and help her settle or could they have entered with her from the garage stayed a bit then exited through another door?
Would that exciting have shown up?
I find it hard to believe whoever brought her home did not go in with her, put lights on, help her get her settled etc.
imo
If it truly was the son-in-law to drive her home, I bet he got out of the car to help her out since she walks with a cane, and escorted her through the garage to the entrance to the house. There's your 2 minutes.
 
  • #6,133
How do they know what time her garage door went up and then down?
Smart garage door openers are ubquitous. Most openers sold by Chamberlain today (the leading manufacturer) have this functionality built in. For older openers, there are several devices you can get to make them "smart." With a smart garage door opener, you get a notification every time it opens and closes, and also that would be logged on the provider's side. With any remotely recently-installed garage door opener that's not bottom of the line, I would expect this functionality (though it's of course possible for people to have it and not configure it).
 
  • #6,134
My gut tells me that family member(s) are responsible for Nancy’s disappearance. My inclination would be that the ransom notes are unrelated because it’s unlikely that a family member would have (or know someone who has) the capability to send the notes from an undiscoverable IP address. Then again, I suppose it’s possible that that the FBI does know the source of the ransom notes, but is building a case beyond the scenes, that we are unaware of. MOO.
Or possibly someone close to the family that needs money.
 
  • #6,135
PACEMAKER From the little I know about them they are linked to usually a phone and that is the case here. Also there are numbers that they connect to when something is not right. I have to assume that primary contact would be Annie. So it follows that at 2:28am she would have received a message or call when it went off line. I assume LE are looking at this but I would like to know more about this. Does this make sense to anyone?
Did the pacemaker go “off line” or did it just disconnect from the Apple Watch, which is the app that monitors it? Can a cardiologist still receive remote data? I am reading conflicting things, but I imagine that there is a lot of info from before the disconnect.
I think the doorstep simply had not been swept in some time. I think the blood is old and not related to her disappearance at all. LE has not mentioned any other blood in the home, have they? If this was some sort of serious injury, there would be a lot more blood, for one thing. The elderly have very thin, fragile skin. It's a normal part of aging. I wouldn't be surprised if she nicked herself on a finger or her arm at some point in the past and lost a few drops of blood on the doorstep. That's been my thought process thus far.
Can they tell if the blood is old or new? If they bothered having a camera installed at the door, it’s a spot where people drop packages or enter. I can’t imagine blood being there for a long time, especially with the amount of foot traffic using that area.
 
  • #6,136
For your first two questions I would say 2% and 95%.

Amateur opinion and speculation only
May I ask why you feel so strongly it is a worker in her circle (as opposed to a family member or friend)?
Totally just curious 🙂 at this point I don’t know what to think so I almost feel like I’m at 50% for everybody lol😵‍💫

Moo
 
  • #6,137
If the ransom notes are fake, unrelated, and the abduction or possible murder was done by someone else, the ransom is definitely helping the actual abductors. Beginning to think she awoke to find someone in her home, confrontation, possible murder. Who?
 
  • #6,138
I'm having a disconnect here because I have no idea what time I open my garage door and what time I close it.

Also, I come in through the garage a lot because our front door is super moody.

How do they know what time her garage door went up and then down?
I am not 100% but I think she may have used an app and that's how they were able to tell.
 
  • #6,139
My gut tells me that family member(s) are responsible for Nancy’s disappearance. My inclination would be that the ransom notes are unrelated because it’s unlikely that a family member would have (or know someone who has) the capability to send the notes from an undiscoverable IP address. Then again, I suppose it’s possible that that the FBI does know the source of the ransom notes, but is building a case beyond the scenes, that we are unaware of. MOO.
No one in her family would gain anything without her death certificate
 
  • #6,140
We used to start new threads when a thread got to 1000 posts because there were people who had dialup and older computers which made a long thread hard to load. Today we shouldn't be having that problem but I could be wrong. Keeping one thread and not starting a new one helps us with some techie crap I don't understand.
If you could @bestill come to the Give Us This Day Our Daily Thread and tell me why you want a new thread.
In fact, if anyone feels a new thread helps them for some reason, please
CLICK HERE AND JOIN THE DAILY THREAD and let me know.
Thanks.
Tricia
i think it's easier having one thread.
 

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