Agreed.Seriously- she is working from a description of an average man of average build with eyes and a flashlight in his mouth.
Agreed.Seriously- she is working from a description of an average man of average build with eyes and a flashlight in his mouth.
I keep wondering, heaven forbid, if someone dropped her at the front entrance. As in they were carrying her and dropped her maybe on her head. And that could have caused the blood on the porch. Just a thought and not crazier than anything else.I think they probably dropped it with something. The other thought, which I don’t like, is that it was drops from a body transport. I just don’t know because it’s hard to believe blood wouldn’t be found in other areas of the home but we may just not know if there is blood elsewhere.
Yes, that's what I think the suspect might be like: someone who has the smarts to have planned this out fairly meticulously, but hasn't actually done it before so they lack the experience to anticipate everything that might come up. But at the same time really confident in their ability to carry this out.I know some people find it hard to reconcile someone who’s fairly smart with tech being the same awkward, haphazard person we see in the doorbell video, but we all know people who are “book smart” or clever tech geeks yet lack common sense, or people who are smart and have common sense but have poor physical motor skills or practical prowess, or any combination of those traits. I’d wager that if Elon Musk or Bill Gates was in the position of the perp at the door, they’d be just as bumbling and clumsy.
JMO
The lab situation is related to a glove that was found inside the house.Landscaper?
Also, it appears that the Sheriff has decided to respond to the lab dust-up. He essentially said it was b.s. but it sounded like the glove/s were the ones found quite a distance from the house-were any gloves in the house sent for testing? Game of
Similar to Bryan Kohburger, maybe.Yes, that's what I think the suspect might be like: someone who has the smarts to have planned this out fairly meticulously, but hasn't actually done it before so they lack the experience to anticipate everything that might come up. But at the same time really confident in their ability to carry this out.
Was the location of porch guy 6.6 miles down the road close to the location of the video of double backpack guy? Anyone know?By "down the road", they mean 6.6 miles. And he didn't break in. He was on their porch but I don't see that he attempted to enter their home.
Highly speculative on my part but I thought initially it looked like something that happened if she tripped or bumped herself when she was say walking out/being hurried out. It's late, a person is scared, old, have some ambulatory issues, and are on blood thinners so bleed easily, I think tripping is a very reasonable reaction to being tired, frightened and not the most agile on their feet anymore, and would explain the blood. Heck I definitely see myself having coordination issues/tripping in that scenario and I don't need a cane.I keep wondering, heaven forbid, if someone dropped her at the front entrance. As in they were carrying her and dropped her maybe on her head. And that could have caused the blood on the porch. Just a thought and not crazier than anything else.
The sketch looks like Jimmy Smits.View attachment 644521View attachment 644522View attachment 644521View attachment 644522
Left to right: Artist sketch, NG Nest camera, Ring camera Jan 23 six miles from NG home
BBM. Somehow I missed that detail. The proximity of the release of that series and this crime can't be coincidental. Do we know if this only aired in the Tucson area?Aside from the series SG did on her life in Tucson and NG being featured in it a few months ago, it stands to reason that NG would also have been a suggested search on google related to SG. Curious people clicking around to look up more info, etc - it could be totally unrelated to the case and benign.
I forgot to mention his facial hair also looks to match the masked man images!This is interesting because I noticed on news reporting that I kept seeing 1 guy walking by the house and reporters and LE. I assumed was a neighbor but I saw him a few times and took note.
Yeah I would be surprised if there are many home invasion robberies etc in that area. Which lends more credence that this was likely a targeted crime imoIf Nancy's home is in the area I'm thinking of, the Pima County Sheriff's Dept is only about 12 miles away. The area has homes that start at the base of the Mountain (Dove Mtn) and work their way up with lots getting larger and houses set further apart than a "subdivision". They have a beautiful golf course, and a Ritz Carlton close by. This home seems to be up in the more secluded area further up the mountain. Stunningly beautiful area and typically low crime rate.
Just my observation.
I was thinking it looked like Zach Efron.The sketch looks like Jimmy Smits.
Cutting the wifi would disconnect the camera too, for another possibility.Would LE know exactly how those nest cameras were disconnected?
From what I read you disconnect them from an app on your phone.
Is there any other way you can disconnect them?
If a stranger disconnected them from Nancy's phone then she would probably have had to participate in doing that either that or someone close to her would be able to access her phone to do that.
Why would he use an independent lab and have to pay out of the county budget and if there is a trial the expenses of lab tech having to testify?Per article this am on foxnews.com
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos is rejecting allegations that he is withholding evidence from the FBI in the Nancy Guthrie Case.
Nanos told KVOA that the allegations are “not even close to the truth.”
A federal law enforcement source previously told Fox News Digital that Nanos was restricting the FBI from obtaining key evidence in the 84-year-old's disappearance. The evidence requested by the FBI includes a glove and DNA found inside Nancy Guthrie’s Tucson, Arizona, home, according to information first reported by Reuters.
Federal officials have asked Nanos for the items so they could be processed at the FBI's national crime laboratory in Quantico, Virginia. However, Nanos has insisted on sending the evidence for testing at a private lab in Florida, according to the source.
Nanos told KVOA that the private lab in Florida has been working with the sheriff’s department for years and is analyzing DNA profiles from the crime scene. He added that there were discussions with the FBI on Thursday morning about possibly sending gloves to the FBI’s lab, the station said.
"Actually the FBI just wanted to send the one or two they found by the crime scene, closest to it – mile, mile and a half . . . I said 'No, why do that? Let’s just send them all to where all the DNA exist, all the profiles and the markers exist.' They agreed, makes sense,” Nanos told KVOA.