Law enforcement believes Nancy Guthrie was abducted from her bed in Arizona, but they’ve been tight-lipped about what details led them to that conclusion about the 84-year-old mother of “Today” anchor Savannah Guthrie.
www.wgal.com
Snipped from above article:
Nanos initially told NBC News, “When you’re taken from your bed and you don’t want to go somewhere, that’s an abduction.” But Nanos “meant that figuratively and did not mean she was literally taken from her bed,” the sheriff’s department later clarified to NBC.
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Okay, this is what I was referring to when I commented earlier that the Sheriff appears to use oblique and somewhat misleading, albeit unintentionally, language when describing some of the facts of the case.
There's a big difference between being taken literally from your bed and figuratively from your bed.
Main difference being I'm not even sure what being taken figuratively from your bed even means.
Most Sheriffs are not trained wordsmiths. I've heard some positively butcher the King's English.
This is not a criticism of LE, again, just pointing out language arts is not typically their area of expertise.
For that reason, I really am not reading anything into his use of the term "abduction."
I really do think he just means she didn't leave the home willingly/of her own volition, but was removed by others, i.e., she was "abducted."
JMO.