Nancy Guthrie's three children, including NBC "Today" host Savannah Guthrie, sent a new message Saturday to the Tucson community through KVOA News Channel 4.
"We desperately ask this community for renewed attention to our mom’s case — please consult camera footage, journal notes, text messages, observations or conversations that in retrospect may hold significance," the family pleaded. "No detail is too small. It may be the key."
"It’s possible a member of this community has information that they do not even realize is significant," they continued. "We hope people search their memories, especially around the key timelines of Jan. 31 and the early morning hours of Feb.1, as well as the late evening of Jan. 11."
The statement was signed by the Guthrie siblings and their spouses: "Camron and Kristine, Annie and Tommaso and Savannah and Michael."
Nancy Guthrie, mother of "Today" show anchor Savannah Guthrie, disappeared from her Tucson-area home on Feb. 1, 2026.
They also wrote, "We are deeply grateful for the outpouring from neighbors, friends and the people of Tucson. We are all family now.
"We continue to believe it is Tucsonans, and the greater southern Arizona community, that hold the key to finding resolution in this case. Someone knows something."
"We miss our mom with every breath and we cannot be in peace until she is home. We cannot grieve; we can only ache and wonder. Our focus is solely on finding her and bringing her home. We want to celebrate her beautiful and courageous life. But we cannot do that until she is brought to a final place of rest.
"Thank you for continuing to pray without ceasing," the family wrote.
Investigators believe Nancy Guthrie, 84, a retired University of Arizona communications professional, was abducted overnight Jan. 31-Feb. 1 from her longtime home near North Campbell Avenue and East Sunrise Drive in the Catalina Foothills.
A sign of solidarity from neighbors at Nancy Guthrie's home after she went missing.
As detectives worked the case, people with Ring doorbell cameras in Guthrie's neighborhood got an alert the week of Feb. 13 saying investigators are requesting footage between 9 p.m. and midnight captured on Jan. 11. Jan. 11 was nearly three weeks before Guthrie went missing.
There has been unconfirmed speculation the earlier date may be related to images recovered from a doorbell camera at Nancy Guthrie's home of a man wearing a ski mask and a holstered gun at her door, which investigators released to the public in early February.
Because some of the images showed the man with a backpack, and others without, there was news reporting later in February by ABC News and then CNN, citing anonymous sources, that the man had been photographed at the Guthrie house on more than one occasion: The night of her abduction and another time.
This image provided by the FBI shows surveillance images of a masked man at the home of Nancy Guthrie.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos urged caution about those reports at the time, saying in a written statement: "We are aware" that doorbell images released during the investigation "depict a suspect in different stages of attire, including with and without a backpack. There is no date or timestamp associated with these images. Therefore, any suggestion that the photographs were taken on different days is purely speculative."
The FBI has described the man at the door as about 5-foot-9 to 5-foot-10 with an average build and a black Ozark Trail backpack.
Investigators have said they have not identified a suspect in the abduction. They have also said they are not ruling out the possibility more than one person was involved.
Nanos, in an interview Friday with longtime Tucson host Bill Buckmaster and Arizona Daily Star columnist Tim Steller, said the Guthrie investigation is "not even close" to being a cold case.
The Sheriff's Department is still working with the FBI, labs around the country and forensics examiners on "thousands (of hours) of video footage we still have to sort through," Nanos said in the interview on KVOI AM 1030's Bill Buckmaster Show.
“The case will get us there. We let the evidence show us the way, and that’s what we base everything on," Nanos said. "Right now, everything is speculative. We don’t have anything in front of us that says 'this is who did this, and this is why'.”
" ... We are working it hard, and we are working it with some really good, quality teams,” the sheriff said.
“I just can’t share everything, but I will tell you this: we have some DNA that we think is still workable, and we have to work that," Nanos said. "And we know the science, and we know we have some labs around this country who are really working diligently to get there with this."
A breakthrough could happen at any time, but “the real breakthrough,” Nanos said, is that “somebody out there knows something, maybe somewhere, somebody’s going to say something.”
This image from early March, made from video provided by FOX News Digital, shows Savannah Guthrie, right, her sister Annie Guthrie, left, and her brother-in-law Tommaso Cioni visiting a tribute outside of Nancy Guthrie's Tucson home.
Savannah Guthrie and the family have offered a $1 million reward for information that leads to Nancy Guthrie's return or recovery.
In addition, 88-CRIME is offering a $102,500 reward. Anyone with information is urged to call 520-882-7463 (520-88-CRIME); tipsters can remain anonymous.
Separately, the FBI is offering a $100,000 reward through 1-800-CALL-FBI.




