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Nancy Guthrie Missing: Video, Mexico Search, Latest Updates

Nancy Guthrie Missing: Video, Mexico Search, Latest Updates
  • PublishedFebruary 22, 2026
ACTIVE MISSING PERSONS CASE — This article reports verified facts from law enforcement sources (FBI, Pima County Sheriff, CBS News, ABC News, NBC News) as of February 21, 2026. Nancy Guthrie remains missing. This is an active investigation. Anyone with information should call 911 or (520) 351-4900.

 

Day 20: FBI Recovers Doorbell Footage, Family Reaches Out to Mexican Nonprofit

What video evidence exists in the Nancy Guthrie case?

The FBI released Nest doorbell camera footage on February 10, 2026 showing a masked suspect tampering with the camera at Nancy Guthrie’s Tucson home the morning of her disappearance. The suspect—described as a male, 5’9″-5’10”, average build—was wearing gloves, a face mask, and carrying a black Ozark Trail 25-liter backpack. Neighbors have submitted additional surveillance video which investigators are reviewing. Guthrie, 84, has been missing since February 1, 2026.

 

Day 20: The Search for Nancy Guthrie Intensifies

Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of NBC ‘Today’ show co-host Savannah Guthrie, has been missing for 20 days. Authorities believe she was forcibly taken from her Tucson, Arizona home in the early morning hours of February 1, 2026. Despite over 20,000 tips, more than $200,000 in rewards, and FBI involvement spanning two countries, investigators have not located her.

This article compiles every verified piece of evidence, tracks the family’s emotional public appeals, and explains where the investigation stands as it enters its third week.

1. Timeline: What We Know Happened

Date Key Event
Jan 31 Last confirmed sighting: Nancy Guthrie seen on camera entering her Tucson home
Feb 1 AM Investigators believe she was taken from her home during early morning hours
Feb 1 Guthrie reported missing after failing to show up for church
Feb 4 Savannah and siblings post first video addressing potential kidnapper
Feb 7 Family says they’ll pay; acknowledges receiving ‘your message’
Feb 10 FBI releases Nest doorbell camera footage showing masked suspect
Feb 13 FBI and sheriff execute search warrant 2 miles from Guthrie home; detain person later released
Feb 17 All family members and spouses officially cleared as suspects
Feb 18 DNA from glove found 2 miles away shows no match in FBI CODIS database
Feb 19 Mexican nonprofit Madres Buscadoras de Sonora joins search effort in Tucson area
Feb 19 FBI confirms contact with Mexican federal law enforcement authorities
Feb 21 Day 20: Over 20,000 tips received; $200,000+ in rewards offered; no arrests

 

2. The Doorbell Camera Video: Most Significant Evidence

On February 10, 2026, the FBI publicly released footage recovered from Nancy Guthrie’s Google Nest doorbell camera — video that had been previously inaccessible but was retrieved from ‘residual data located in backend systems.’

What the Video Shows

  • A masked male suspect approaching Guthrie’s front door
  • Suspect raises gloved hand toward the camera before turning away
  • In separate clip: suspect faces camera with flashlight in mouth, then covers lens with vegetation
  • Suspect carrying a black Ozark Trail 25-liter Hiker Pack backpack

Suspect Description

  • Male, approximately 5’9″ to 5’10” tall
  • Average build
  • Wearing face mask and gloves
  • Clothing and face mask possibly purchased at Walmart (per Sheriff Nanos)

The Backpack Lead

Sheriff Chris Nanos called the Ozark Trail backpack ‘one of the most promising leads’ in the case. The backpack is sold exclusively at Walmart. Investigators have been reviewing surveillance footage from local Walmart stores and obtained records of all Ozark Trail Hiker purchases from recent months.

Neighbor Surveillance Video

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department confirmed neighbors have submitted surveillance video from the area. ‘Investigators are carefully reviewing that footage,’ the department stated February 21. No additional video has been publicly released.

3. DNA Evidence: The Glove and Property Samples

The Glove Discovery

A glove was found approximately 2 miles from Guthrie’s home in a field near a roadside. The glove appears to match those worn by the suspect in the doorbell camera video. DNA from the glove was submitted to CODIS (FBI’s Combined DNA Index System) on February 18, 2026. Result: no match in the national criminal database.

The lack of a CODIS match means the DNA profile does not belong to someone with a previous arrest for certain crimes who had supplied DNA that entered the system.

Genetic Genealogy Next Step

Investigators will search commercial genealogy databases with the same DNA profile, according to a federal law enforcement source who spoke to CBS News. This is a different process from CODIS — it uses publicly available genealogy data to identify potential family connections.

Genetic genealogy famously cracked the Golden State Killer case in 2018 and led to the arrest of Bryan Kohberger in the University of Idaho murders.

Additional DNA from Property

The sheriff’s department said ‘biological evidence’ that doesn’t belong to Nancy Guthrie or those in close contact with her was collected from her property and is being analyzed. The department has not disclosed where on the property this DNA was found. The DNA from the glove did not match this property DNA.

4. The Mexico Connection: Cross-Border Search Efforts

FBI Contact with Mexican Authorities

Law enforcement sources confirmed to CBS News and NewsNation that the FBI has contacted Mexican federal law enforcement and the Mexican government regarding Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance. The FBI maintains dedicated border liaison agents along the U.S.-Mexico border, and the FBI’s Hermosillo suboffice (in Sonora, the Mexican state bordering Arizona) is most relevant to this case.

However, officials said on February 18 they have no evidence to suggest Guthrie is in Mexico. Sheriff Nanos stated: ‘There is no indication Guthrie was taken into Mexico, but that doesn’t necessarily mean that an investigation in the area has not been launched.’

Madres Buscadoras de Sonora

On February 19, 2026, the Mexican nonprofit organization Madres Buscadoras de Sonora (Searching Mothers of Sonora) joined the search effort. The group—founded in 2019 and comprising mothers, wives, and volunteers dedicated to finding missing people—posted a message on social media asking for information about Guthrie’s whereabouts.

Initial reports suggested a Guthrie family member directly contacted the organization. However, the group’s founder Ceci Flores Armenta told TMZ that a reporter reached out requesting their help, not the family. The organization hopes to contact the family directly.

Guadalupe Trejo, one of the mothers searching in Tucson on behalf of the organization, lost her own son 5 years ago. She and two other volunteers have been combing terrain outside Nancy’s house.

5. The Family’s Heartbreaking Public Appeals

Savannah Guthrie and her siblings—Annie and Camron—have posted multiple videos to Instagram pleading for their mother’s return. Each video has served a different purpose as the family navigates an impossible situation.

February 4: Humanizing Nancy

The first video featured all three siblings. Savannah described their mother as a ‘kind, faithful, loyal, fiercely loving woman of goodness and light.’ She emphasized Nancy’s health issues: ‘She lives in constant pain. She is without any medicine. She needs it to survive.’

February 7: ‘We Will Pay’

In this video, the siblings held hands as Savannah said they’d received ‘your message’—an apparent reference to ransom communications. ‘We beg you now to return our mother to us,’ she said. For the first time, the family explicitly stated: ‘This is very valuable to us, and we will pay.’

February 9: ‘We Believe She’s Still Out There’

Savannah posted alone, thanking the public for prayers and saying: ‘We believe our mom is still out there. We are at an hour of desperation.’

February 16: ‘It’s Never Too Late’

In her most recent video, Savannah addressed whoever has her mother: ‘You’re not lost or alone, and it is never too late to do the right thing. We are here. And we believe. And we believe in the essential goodness of every human being.’

6. Where the Investigation Stands: Day 20

What Investigators Are Doing

  • Following up on 20,000+ tips (about 10% have value, per authorities)
  • Reviewing neighbor surveillance footage
  • Processing genetic genealogy on DNA evidence
  • Working with FBI, ATF, and Mexican authorities
  • Analyzing Walmart purchases of Ozark Trail backpacks

Who Has Been Cleared

All of Guthrie’s family members and their spouses have been cleared as suspects. The Pima County Sheriff’s Department announced February 17 that polygraph testing and investigation confirmed no family involvement.

Ransom Communications

Multiple media outlets—including TMZ and local Arizona stations—have received purported ransom notes. One demanded $6 million by a specific deadline. Another requested 1 bitcoin. A third claimed to know where Guthrie is located ‘south of the border.’ Law enforcement has not publicly confirmed the legitimacy of these communications.

Reward Total

Over $200,000 is now being offered for information: $100,000 from the FBI, $102,500 from 88-CRIME (including a $100,000 anonymous donation).

7. People Also Ask

Is Nancy Guthrie related to Savannah Guthrie?

Direct Answer

Yes. Nancy Guthrie, 84, is the mother of NBC ‘Today’ show co-host Savannah Guthrie. Nancy lives in Tucson, Arizona. Savannah has two siblings—Annie and Camron—who have appeared in videos pleading for their mother’s return.

 

What does the doorbell video show?

The FBI-released Nest doorbell footage shows a masked male suspect (5’9″-5’10”, average build) approaching Nancy Guthrie’s front door, raising a gloved hand toward the camera, and later covering the camera lens with vegetation. He was carrying a black Ozark Trail 25-liter backpack sold exclusively at Walmart.

Has anyone been arrested in Nancy Guthrie’s case?

No. As of February 21, 2026 (Day 20), no arrests have been made. One person was briefly detained February 13 when law enforcement executed a search warrant 2 miles from Guthrie’s home, but that person was released with no charges and confirmed to have no connection to the case.

Is there evidence Nancy Guthrie is in Mexico?

No. Two law enforcement officials briefed on the case told NBC News on February 18 that there is no evidence Guthrie was taken to Mexico. However, the FBI has contacted Mexican federal authorities as a precautionary measure, and a Mexican nonprofit (Madres Buscadoras de Sonora) has joined the search in the Tucson area.

How much reward money is being offered?

Over $200,000 total: $100,000 from the FBI, and $102,500 from the 88-CRIME tipline (which includes a $100,000 anonymous donation).

8. How You Can Help

Anyone with information about Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance is urged to contact:

  • 911 (emergency)
  • Pima County Sheriff’s Department: (520) 351-4900
  • 88-CRIME tipline (reward eligible): (520) 882-7463

Sheriff’s investigators ask that callers ‘think twice’ before calling to ensure tips have real value, as the volume of tips (20,000+) is overwhelming the system.

Sources

  • NBC News — Official law enforcement statements and family updates
  • CBS News — FBI Mexico contact, doorbell video details, DNA evidence
  • ABC News — Live investigation updates, suspect detention details
  • FOX 10 Phoenix — Day-by-day timeline and local coverage
  • TMZ — Ransom note reporting and Madres Buscadoras details
  • NewsNation — FBI polygraph testing and Mexico outreach
Editorial Note

This article is based solely on verified reporting from law enforcement sources and major news organizations as of February 21, 2026. Nancy Guthrie remains missing. The investigation is active. No speculation is included. Our goal is to provide factual information that may assist in her recovery.

 


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Written By
Michael Carter

Michael leads editorial strategy at MatterDigest, overseeing fact-checking, investigative coverage, and content standards to ensure accuracy and credibility.

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