Black gloves were found in Nancy Guthrie's neighborhood and were being tested for DNA, the Pima County Sheriff's Department confirmed Thursday.
Video taken Wednesday by the New York Post showed what appeared to be agents finding and retrieving a black glove from a desert shrub by a roadside about a mile and a half from Guthrie's home.
Fresh surveillance imagesΒ from Guthrieβs porch the night she went missing, coupled with intense police activity across Arizona and the detention of a man had raised hopes that authorities were nearing a major break.
But then the man was released after questioning, leaving it unclear Wednesday where the investigation stood into last weekβs disappearance of Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of βTodayβ show hostΒ Savannah Guthrie.
FBI agents carrying water bottles to beat the 80-degree heat walked among rocks and desert vegetation at Guthrie's Tucson-area home. They also fanned out across a neighborhood about a mile away, knocking on doors and searching through cactuses, bushes and boulders.
Video taken Wednesday by the New York Post showed what appeared to be agents finding and retrieving a black glove from a desert shrub by a roadside about a mile and a half from Nancy Guthrie's home. The FBI declined to comment to the Arizona Daily Star.
Pima County Sheriff's Department on Thursday confirmed that black gloves were found in the neighborhood and were being tested for DNA, according to a sheriff's department update.
KOLD also reported that a law enforcement source close to the investigation said they are familiar with the brand of backpack, possibly an Ozark Trail Hiker, seen on the armed, masked man pictured on security footage at Guthrie's door, which the FBI released Tuesday, and are looking into it and other brands.
And local news reports Wednesday said people with Ring doorbell cameras in the area got an alert saying investigators are requesting footage between 9 p.m. and midnight captured in Jan. 11 in connection with the Guthrie case. That's nearly three weeks before Guthrie went missing.
Ring allows local public safety agencies to submit requests to users in the community that appear publicly on the βNeighborsβ feed, according to the Ring website. Users in a designated area receive a notification.
On Thursday morning, investigators were at the home covering up the front archway that leads to the home's front door.
Several hundred detectives and agents are now assigned to the investigation, which is expanding in the area, the Pima County Sheriff's Department said.
In a nearby neighborhood, two investigators emerged from daughter Annie Guthrieβs home with a paper grocery sack and a white trash bag. One, still wearing blue protective gloves, also took a stack of mail from the roadside mailbox. They drove away without speaking to reporters.
Barb Dutrow, who was jogging through a neighborhood where teams were searching, said an FBI agent told her they were looking for anything that might have been tossed from a car.
Dutrow, who was visiting from Louisiana for a convention, said she "can't imagine the feeling of the family of having their mother taken.β
A day earlier, authorities said they had stopped a man near the U.S.-Mexico border, just hours after the FBI released videos of a person wearing a gun holster, ski mask and backpack and approachingΒ Nancy Guthrie's homeΒ in Tucson.
The man told media outlets early Wednesday that he was released after several hours and had nothing to do with Guthrie's disappearance last week.
Authorities have not said what led them to stop the man Tuesday but confirmed he was released. The sheriff's department said its deputies and FBI agents also searched a location in Rio Rico, a city south of Tucson where the man lives.
It wasΒ the latest twistΒ in an investigation that hasΒ gripped the nationΒ since Nancy Guthrie disappeared on Feb. 1.
Until Tuesday, it seemed authorities were making little headway in determining what happened to her or finding who was responsible.
The black and white images released by the FBI showing a masked person trying to cover a doorbell camera on Guthrieβs porch marked the first significant break in the case. But the images did not showΒ what happened to herΒ or help determine whether she is still alive.
FBI Director Kash Patel saidΒ investigators spent daysΒ trying to find lost, corrupted or inaccessible images.
Even though the images do not show the person's face, investigators are hopeful someone will know who was on the porch. More than 4,000 calls came into theΒ Pima County sheriff'sΒ tip line within the past 24 hours, the department said Wednesday afternoon.
Authorities have said for more than a week that they believe Nancy Guthrie wasΒ taken against her will.
She was last seen at home Jan. 31 and reported missing the next day. DNA tests showed blood on her porch was hers, authorities said.
Savannah Guthrie posted the new surveillance images on social media and said the family believes their mother is still alive.
The longtime NBC hostΒ and her two siblings have indicated a willingness to pay a ransom.
It is not known whether ransom notes demanding money with deadlines that have already passed were authentic, and whether the family has had any contact with whoever took Guthrie.
TMZ reported it received a message Wednesday from someone claiming to know the kidnapperβs identity and that they unsuccessfully tried to reach Savannah Guthrieβs brother and sister. The person asked for bitcoin in exchange for the information, TMZ said. The FBI did not immediately respond to a message.
Authorities have said Nancy Guthrie takes several medications and there was concern from the start that she could die without them.



