
Nancy Guthrie Case Update: FBI Raises Reward to $100K as New Evidence Emerges near Tucson Home
A newly recovered item may hold the key to solving Nancy Guthrie's disappearance, but a turf war between federal and local authorities is threatening to derail the investigation.
The evidence in question was pulled from desert brush near the 84-year-old woman's Tucson home. On its own, it could represent a major breakthrough.
Instead, it has become the center of a jurisdictional standoff that is costing investigators valuable time.

An FBI agent searches the area around Nancy Guthrie's residence on February 11, 2026 | Source: Getty Images
FBI Doubles Reward to $100,000
As tensions simmer behind the scenes, federal investigators made a public move.
On February 13, the FBI announced they're increasing the reward to $100,000 for information leading to Nancy's location or the arrest and conviction of anyone involved in her kidnapping. The dramatic boost signals mounting urgency nearly two weeks after she vanished from her Tucson home on the night of January 31, 2026.

Searches continue around Nancy Guthrie's residence in Tucson, Arizona | Source: Getty Images
More than 13,000 tips have flooded in since early February. Threat Intake Examiners at the National Threat Operations Center work around-the-clock reviewing every submission for credibility and actionable intelligence.
Dozens of agents and investigators staff a 24-hour command post, processing leads every shift. The FBI continues urging anyone with information to call 1-800-CALL-FBI or visit tips.fbi.gov.

Members of the FBI surveil an area around Nancy Guthrie's residence on February 11, 2026 | Source: Getty Images
New Suspect Details Confirmed
The reward increase coincides with refined identifying details about the perpetrator following forensic analysis by the FBI's Operational Technology Division. Investigators now describe the suspect as a male standing approximately 5'9" to 5'10" tall with an average build.

The suspect approaches Nancy Guthrie's house, seen in a post dated February 10, 2026 | Source: Instagram Reel/savannahguthrie

Doorbell footage captures a person of interest outside Nancy Guthrie's home, from a post dated February 10, 2026 | Source: Instagram/savannahguthrie
In recovered doorbell camera footage, he's carrying a distinctive black "Ozark Trail Hiker Pack" backpack with a 25-liter capacity. Officials hope the added specificity will sharpen public tips and narrow the search.
A black "Ozark Trail Hiker Pack" backpack | Source: X/@fbiphoenix
Yet even with the video evidence and thousands of leads, investigators still lacked something tangible. Then came the discovery in the desert.
A black "Ozark Trail Hiker Pack" backpack | Source: X/@fbiphoenix
A black "Ozark Trail Hiker Pack" backpack | Source: X/@fbiphoenix
Critical Evidence Pulled from Desert Brush
FBI Evidence Response team members recently recovered a piece of physical evidence from low desert shrubbery roughly one and a half miles from Nancy's secluded residence at the edge of Tucson. Agents photographed the item as they pulled it from the brush.
The discovery could represent the most significant physical clue yet. The recovered item is a black glove that closely matches the type worn by the armed perpetrator visible in surveillance footage.

The intruder wore black gloves | Source: Instagram/savannahguthrie
For investigators hunting Nancy's abductor, the glove offers potential DNA evidence, fingerprints, or other forensic traces. But there's a major problem preventing the FBI from analyzing it.

Nancy Guthrie, from a post dated September 4, 2015 | Source: Facebook/NancyGuthrie
Sheriff Reportedly Blocks FBI Access to Key Evidence
The case has now shifted from the desert to a dispute over who controls the evidence.
A federal law enforcement source revealed to Fox News Digital that Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos is blocking the FBI from obtaining crucial evidence in the case. The jurisdictional standoff threatens to slow an investigation where every minute matters.

Pima County Sheriff, Chris Nanos, speaks to the media in Tucson, Arizona | Source: Getty Images
The evidence Nanos refuses to release includes the desert-recovered glove and DNA collected from inside Nancy's home. Federal officials requested that all materials be sent to the FBI's national crime laboratory in Quantico, Virginia, where the country's top forensic experts could process everything immediately.
Private Florida Lab Chosen Instead of FBI Facility
Instead, Sheriff Nanos has insisted on sending the evidence to a private laboratory in Florida rather than cooperating with federal analysts. That decision has sparked concern within federal ranks.

Pima County Sheriff, Chris Nanos | Source: Getty Images
An unnamed official criticized the decision, warning it "risks further slowing a case that grows more urgent by the minute." The source also cited "earlier setbacks" in the investigation and questioned why Nanos waited so long to request FBI involvement.
Under the current protocol, the Pima County Sheriff's Office remains the primary investigative authority in the case. The FBI may assist, but only when formally invited.

Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos speaks during a news conference | Source: Getty Images
Time Running Out as Standoff Continues
The bureaucratic battle drags on while the clock ticks. Nancy's pacemaker stopped transmitting data to her phone app at 2:28 a.m. on February 1, just 16 minutes after her doorbell camera registered motion at 2:12 a.m.
Family members found splatters of blood outside her residence that Sunday morning after she failed to attend church. Forensic testing confirmed it belonged to Nancy.
The FBI keeps pushing for cooperation while urging the public to submit information that could bring the "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother home safely.
The physical evidence discovery follows intense public scrutiny of surveillance images showing a masked individual at Nancy's front door.

Front of Nancy Guthrie's home in Tucson, Arizona, on February 7, 2026 | Source: Getty Images
What the Department Released From the Recovered Footage
The images, shared on X by PCSD, show an individual wearing a tight face covering that conceals nearly the entire face, leaving only the eyes visible. The person is dressed in dark, layered clothing and gloves, standing beneath the brick entryway.
In one still, the individual raises what appears to be a padded glove toward the camera lens. In another, the person appears to be handling or interfering with the doorbell camera.

A masked individual standing beneath the brick entryway at Nancy Guthrie's Arizona home | Source: x/PimaSheriff
Authorities said retrieving the footage required extensive technical work, stating:
"Over the last eight days, the FBI and Pima County Sheriff's Department have been working closely with our private sector partners to continue to recover any images or video footage from Nancy Guthrie's home that may have been lost, corrupted, or inaccessible due to a variety of factors, including the removal of recording devices."
The department said the video was recovered from residual data located in backend systems, as reported by People.

The individual raises a padded glove toward the surveillance camera | Source: Instagram/savannahguthrie
How Savannah Guthrie Responded to the Released Images
Shortly after law enforcement made them public, Nancy's daughter, Savannah Guthrie, shared the same surveillance images on her Instagram page.
"We believe she is still alive. Bring her home," she wrote. "Anyone with information, please contact 1-800-CALL-FBI (1-800-225-5324) or the Pima County Sheriff's Department 520-351-4900."
In a separate post that included video from the front door camera, she emphasized, "Someone out there recognizes this person." In that same message, she reiterated her belief that her mother is still alive and renewed her appeal to help ensure her safe return.
What Social Media Users Are Saying About the Images
As the images circulated online, viewers began closely examining the person's visible features. "Tall male with prominent mustache, long eyelashes, and dark, prominent eyebrows," one commenter wrote on Instagram.
"The eyes look feminine a little bit!" another Instagrammer added. "That looks like a woman," a third said. "This person seems to have very distinct eyes. Long eyelashes," a different commenter observed.
Despite the online speculation, authorities have not released additional identifying details.
For now, the masked visitor remains unidentified as investigators continue to seek information in the case.
A Notification With No Proof
Before investigators were able to recover the masked figure from backend systems, authorities had acknowledged that a key piece of surveillance footage from the night Nancy disappeared appeared to be gone.

Nancy Guthrie, from a post dated December 20, 2024 | Source: Facebook/Savannah Guthrie
A Notification With No Proof
As previously reported, during a press conference on February 5, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos revealed that Nancy's doorbell camera disconnected around 1:47 a.m. on Sunday. Less than half an hour later, something unexpected happened.
"At 2:12 a.m. [local time], software detects a person on a camera, but there's no video available," Sheriff Nanos said, as reported by Page Six.
That alert fell within the window that investigators believe Nancy was taken from her bed. But when detectives tried to pull the footage, there was nothing to review.
Why the Footage Is Gone
"They had no subscription and therefore it would rewrite itself," the sheriff continued. "It just kind of loops and covers up. That's what our analysis teams have told us."
Without video, investigators were left uncertain about what triggered the alert. The movement could have been an animal. Despite their efforts at the time, authorities initially had no way to recover the clips from Nancy's house.
One Last Attempt
Officials did attempt to salvage something from the device. Sheriff Nanos later told CNN that investigators sent what data they could to an outside company, but it led nowhere.
But he stressed at the time that they were still working on it. "We're not done with our efforts in that," he added, while also confirming that authorities were exploring other places where the camera could be sent. The brand of the item itself had not been revealed yet.
A Timeline That Keeps Tightening
The security alert was not the only technology to go silent that night. Nancy's pacemaker disconnected from her phone app around 2:28 a.m. on February 1, just minutes after movement was detected.
By Sunday morning, concern deepened when Nancy failed to attend church. Her family checked on her home around 11:56 a.m., and police were called shortly after.
Officers arrived at 12:15 p.m., and blood was found outside the home and later confirmed to be Nancy's.
Ransom Notes Raise the Stakes
Investigators were also examining ransom notes sent to two media outlets, including TMZ. The messages included deadlines and a threat that read, "Or else."
According to the outlet, the note demanded millions in Bitcoin.
At the same press conference, FBI Phoenix Special Agent Heith Janke revealed additional insights, including a second demand for Monday, February 9. However, he did not reveal the exact details.
Instead, he said the note referenced Nancy's watch and the floodlights in her house. Agent Janke said that any ransom decision was up to the Guthrie family.
Still No Clear Suspect
The FBI has announced a $50,000 reward for information leading to Nancy's location or the arrest and conviction of anyone involved in her disappearance.
Officers are "actively looking at everyone" as a potential suspect, though no one has been publicly named.
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