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https://nytimes.com/live/2026/02/11/us/nancy-guthrie-case-updates
Authorities are investigating the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of Savannah Guthrie, as a possible kidnapping. Surveillance footage of a masked person at her home has been released. A man detained for questioning was later released.
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- AI Headline
- Live Updates: Search for Nancy Guthrie
- Simplified Title
- Authorities Investigate Nancy Guthrie Disappearance Kidnapping Case
- AI Excerpt
- Authorities are investigating the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of Savannah Guthrie, as a possible kidnapping. Surveillance footage of a masked person at her home has been released. A man detained for questioning was later released.
- Subject Tags
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Kidnapping Missing Person Crime Investigation Savannah Guthrie Bitcoin Arizona
- Context Type
- News
- AI Confidence Score
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1.000
- Context Details
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{ "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes", "reporting from the scene", "multiple sources" ] }
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- nytimes.com
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- Donato V. Pompo
- Submission Date
- February 11, 2026 at 5:34 PM
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{ "source_type": "extension", "content_hash": "b8524eeced27b77eac9dcf7d3c0a70ff40e4a92d8ddfd658e39b33d7ee527f41", "submitted_via": "chrome_extension", "extension_version": "1.0.18", "original_url": "https:\/\/www.nytimes.com\/live\/2026\/02\/11\/us\/nancy-guthrie-case-updates?campaign_id=60&emc=edit_na_20260211&instance_id=170916&nl=breaking-news®i_id=122976029&segment_id=215105&user_id=b25c5730c89e0c73f75709d8f1254337", "parsed_content": "PinnedNicholas Bogel-BurroughsChelsia Rose Marcius and Jill CowanNicholas Bogel-Burroughs reported from Rio Rico, Ariz.A flurry of activity related to the investigation of Nancy Guthrie\u2019s disappearance ended early Wednesday with the release of a man detained during a traffic stop near the Mexican border and questioned for several hours by authorities in Arizona.The man\u2019s release, hours after chilling video footage of a suspect was provided to the public, appeared to leave investigators no closer to solving the case that has mesmerized much of America since the mother of \u201cToday\u201d show anchor Savannah Guthrie vanished 11 days ago.In an interview early Wednesday after he was released by the authorities, the man, who identified himself only as Carlos, said he had not heard about the Guthrie case. \u201cI hope they get the suspect, because I\u2019m not it,\u201d he said, speaking on the doorstep of his wife and mother-in-law\u2019s home in Rio Rico, Ariz., about an hour\u2019s drive south of Ms. Guthrie\u2019s suburban home just outside of Tucson.Earlier on Tuesday, footage released by law enforcement authorities revealed a masked person on Nancy Guthrie\u2019s porch about the time that she is believed to have vanished from her neighborhood near Tucson early on Feb. 1. The person is wearing a ski mask, gloves and a backpack, and appears to be armed with a pistol.The authorities have said they are investigating Nancy Guthrie\u2019s disappearance as a kidnapping, and Savannah Guthrie and her siblings have released a series of videos pleading with whoever is involved to reach out to them. They said they were prepared to listen to ransom demands.Here\u2019s what we\u2019re covering:Rio Rico search: The F.B.I. and the Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department carried out what they described as a \u201ccourt-authorized search\u201d in Rio Rico, which had been completed by early Wednesday morning. A woman at the home being searched said that her son-in-law, the man detained for questioning in the case, had been delivering food when he was stopped by the police. Read more \u203aChilling video: The 44 seconds of silent, black-and-white surveillance footage released on Tuesday shows a masked figure approaching Ms. Guthrie\u2019s house and raising a gloved hand to block a Nest doorbell camera. The camera was eventually disabled, making the footage initially inaccessible until it could be recovered from backups. Read more \u203aTimeline: Ms. Guthrie\u2019s older daughter, Annie, and her son-in-law, Tommaso Cioni, were the last people to see her before she vanished. Mr. Cioni drove Ms. Guthrie home from dinner on Jan. 31. Hours later, at about 1:47 a.m., the front door camera was disconnected. Investigators believe that she was most likely taken soon after. Read more \u203aRansom demand: The authorities had said last week that they were reviewing a message sent to a Tucson television station, but did not confirm that it was related to a purported ransom note sent earlier, which demanded millions of dollars in Bitcoin. Read more \u203aShow moreFeb. 11, 2026, 12:06 p.m. ET28 minutes agoNicholas Bogel-BurroughsReporting from Tucson, Ariz.The Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department said it has no plans to update the public with a news conference today on the search for Nancy Guthrie. Officials have not commented on what led them to detain a man for questioning in the case last night after a traffic stop. He was released about 10 hours ago.Feb. 11, 2026, 11:17 a.m. ET1 hour agoLaura ChungImageA Bitcoin wallet listed in a note claiming to be from Nancy Guthrie\u2019s kidnapper received a small payment, according to a Tucson, Ariz. television station.Credit...Justin Sullivan\/Getty ImagesA Bitcoin wallet listed in a note claiming to be from Nancy Guthrie\u2019s kidnapper has received a small payment, according to a Tucson, Ariz. television station, thrusting cryptocurrency into the center of a case that has gripped the nation.The episode highlights why digital currencies have become a common tool in ransom demands, and how difficult they can be to trace.Several news outlets received a supposed ransom note last week demanding payment to a Bitcoin wallet. One of them, KGUN, a Tucson television station, said on Tuesday night that the wallet had received a payment for less than $300. It remains unclear whether the person who sent the note is actually connected to Ms. Guthrie\u2019s abduction.Since Bitcoin emerged in 2009, it has become a common payment method in extortion schemes, including ransomware attacks and kidnappings, because it allows transactions to be conducted outside the traditional financial system.Unlike bank transfers, Bitcoin transactions do not require names or physical locations. They rely instead on a string of characters known as a Bitcoin address.\u201cThe other alternative option that you have if you\u2019re a kidnapper, for example, or you\u2019re engaged in some other form of ransom demands, is you ask for a briefcase brimming with cash to be dropped off somewhere,\u201d said Anton Moiseienko, an associate professor of law at Australian National University.\u201cBut that requires physical contact. Someone needs to leave cash. Someone needs to pick it up. Bitcoin can operate across countries, geographies, continents and so on,\u201d he said.Tracing a cryptocurrency transfer presents two main challenges: identifying who owns the account and where the money ultimately goes, said Dennis Desmond, a cyber-intelligence lecturer at Australia\u2019s University of the Sunshine Coast and a former F.B.I. special agent.He likened the challenge to searching for a needle in a stack of needles.\u201cIf the funds are immediately transferred to other wallets, aggregated, consolidated, and then again shipped out to other wallets, or hundreds of wallets in different countries, it\u2019s very difficult to recover those funds,\u201d said Mr. Desmond.Still, cryptocurrency transfers are not as difficult to trace as criminals may assume. Each transaction is recorded on a publicly viewable ledger known as a blockchain.The authorities, often working with specialized cryptocurrency-tracking companies, can monitor transactions from a particular wallet and determine whether the money is moved to other wallets or digital exchanges, Mr. Desmond said.From there, the authorities may be able to gather identifying details, such as associated IP addresses, when a wallet was created and how frequently it has been used.For example, in 2021, federal officials recovered most of the Bitcoin ransom paid by Colonial Pipeline after a ransomware attack shut down the company\u2019s computer systems, prompting fuel shortages and a spike in gasoline prices. The authorities did not disclose how they retrieved the funds.Show moreFeb. 11, 2026, 4:42 a.m. ET8 hours agoNicholas Bogel-BurroughsReporting from Tucson, Ariz.VideoCarlos, who declined to provide a last name, told reporters on Wednesday that the police detained him for several hours before releasing him.CreditCredit...Nicholas Bogel-BurroughsA man was released from custody early Wednesday morning after being detained for questioning in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of the \u201cToday\u201d show anchor Savannah Guthrie.The release of the man was a blow to investigators, who are entering their 11th day of trying to determine who may have abducted Ms. Guthrie\u2019s 84-year-old mother and where she is now.The man who was released, a 36-year-old named Carlos, said that he had been in his car on Tuesday evening in Rio Rico, Ariz., about an hour\u2019s drive south of Tucson, when police officers asked him his name and then detained him.He was held for several hours, he said, before eventually being released with wrists swollen from handcuffs.Carlos, who declined to give his last name, gave an account of his detention in a brief interview on the porch of the home he shares with his wife and mother-in-law in Rio Rico just before 1 a.m. on Wednesday, after the police had combed through the house.He said he had not heard of Nancy Guthrie, who was abducted from her home near Tucson on Feb. 1, but hoped that the police found the culprit.\u201cI hope they get the suspect, because I\u2019m not it,\u201d he said. \u201cThey better do their job and find the suspect that did it so that they can clear my name.\u201dA spokeswoman for the Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department, which is leading the investigation along with the F.B.I., said only that investigators had finished searching a property in Rio Rico, which is near the U.S.-Mexico border.The detention and release of the man came a day after what appeared to be the biggest break in the case, when the authorities were able to recover footage from Ms. Guthrie\u2019s doorbell camera that showed a masked, armed person at her doorstep on the night she went missing.Savannah Guthrie has pleaded with anyone who recognizes the person in the video to reach out to the authorities.Show moreFeb. 10, 2026, 7:04 p.m. ETFeb. 10, 2026Jacey FortinImageImages provided by the F.B.I. show surveillance footage taken at the home of Nancy Guthrie on a Nest camera.Credit...F.B.I. via Associated PressDoorbell camera footage of a masked man at Nancy Guthrie\u2019s front door was made public on Tuesday, 10 days after her family last saw her.The video \u2014 silent, grainy and in black-and-white \u2014 shows a person approaching Ms. Guthrie\u2019s doorstep on the night she was abducted. The person wears a ski mask, gloves, a backpack and what appears to be a holstered handgun.The authorities have known since last week that the camera was disconnected at 1:47 a.m. on Feb. 1. But in a statement on Tuesday, the F.B.I. and the Pima County, Ariz., Sheriff\u2019s Department said that the footage had been uncovered only \u201cas of this morning,\u201d and that the images had been \u201cpreviously inaccessible.\u201dIt was unclear why the footage took more than a week to retrieve. The Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department referred questions to the F.B.I., which declined to offer more information.The video does offer a clue. It is stamped in the upper right corner with a name: Nest, a home electronics brand that is part of Google.An internet-enabled Nest doorbell, which sells for about $150, can record video and alert homeowners to sounds and movements on their doorsteps. Owners can pay a monthly subscription to get premium features, like long-term video history.If Ms. Guthrie had had a paid subscription to a premium package, the authorities might have had access to footage stored on her account, said Adam Wandt, an associate professor and the deputy chair for technology at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice in New York City.But Ms. Guthrie did not pay for a subscription that would have stored the video, according to Chris Nanos, the Pima County Sheriff. So while she may have been able to access real-time video, historical footage would probably be stored only on a server somewhere in one of Google\u2019s vast data centers.It is unclear whether investigators used a warrant to obtain the footage. They may not have been required to, because the kidnapping of Ms. Guthrie, who is the mother of \u201cToday\u201d show host Savannah Guthrie, might be considered an exigent circumstance \u2014 a legal exception to the warrant requirement under the Fourth Amendment.Google did not immediately respond to questions about the footage, but Mr. Wandt speculated that finding the data could have taken days.First, investigators would have had to request the data from Google.\u201cSometimes those requests are clear and simple,\u201d Mr. Wandt said. \u201cHowever, they often are not, and they might take more than one back-and-forth. And then the company might need a day or two, or three, to figure out how to get that data.\u201dShow moreFeb. 10, 2026, 6:46 p.m. ETFeb. 10, 2026Nicholas Bogel-BurroughsReporting from Tucson, Ariz.Three snippets of video released by the authorities on Tuesday gave the first glimpse of a suspect in the kidnapping of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of the \u201cToday\u201d show host Savannah Guthrie.The silent, black-and-white doorbell camera videos total just 44 seconds, but what they depict is frightening: a masked, armed person approaching Nancy Guthrie\u2019s doorstep late at night, shortly before she was abducted.For the past 10 days, it appeared that the footage had been lost, but the F.B.I. and Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department said in a statement that they had managed to get it on Tuesday morning after working with private companies and accessing \u201cresidual data\u201d in \u201cback-end systems.\u201dHere is what the videos show:ImageCredit...@FBIDirectorKash, via XThe person approaches the front door of Ms. Guthrie\u2019s home, just north of Tucson, Ariz., seemingly holding a flashlight in their mouth. The F.B.I. declined to provide the exact time of the footage, but said it was on the morning that Ms. Guthrie was abducted.ImageCredit...FBI, via Associated PressThe person at the front door is wearing a ski mask, a backpack, gloves and a jacket. The person also has what appears to be a handgun holstered at the waist.ImageCredit...FBI, via Associated PressThe person looks around the porch and notices the Nest doorbell camera, quickly raising a gloved right hand to block it.ImageCredit...FBI, via Associated PressDespite trying to block the camera, a few of the person\u2019s features are visible: eyes, eyebrows and part of the mouth. About 10 seconds after blocking the camera, the person turns around.ImageCredit...@FBIDirectorKash, via XThe masked suspect walks off Ms. Guthrie\u2019s porch and bends down to pick up some foliage. The person quickly looks around before returning to the front door.ImageCredit...F.B.I, via Associated PressThere, the person, once again holding a flashlight in their mouth, tries to drape the plant around the camera to occlude its view.The police have said that the doorbell camera was disconnected at 1:47 a.m. on Feb. 1.At 2:28 a.m., Ms. Guthrie\u2019s pacemaker lost contact with her cellphone, which was later found at the home, suggesting that she was taken at that time.She has not been heard from since.Show moreFeb. 10, 2026, 5:31 p.m. ETFeb. 10, 2026The New York TimesImageThe authorities in Pima County, Ariz., have repeatedly closed and reopened the crime scene at Nancy Guthrie\u2019s house near Tucson since she was reported missing on Feb. 1.Credit...Rebecca Noble\/ReutersFor more than a week, the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of the \u201cToday\u201d show host Savannah Guthrie, has confounded the authorities. And because it involves the possible abduction of a celebrity\u2019s relative, it has captivated much of the nation.Investigators have spent days analyzing notes from people claiming to be the kidnappers, including one that demanded millions of dollars in Bitcoin. In the latest development, the authorities on Tuesday released black-and-white surveillance video and images from Ms. Guthrie\u2019s doorstep.The video was taken by a disabled doorbell camera. They show a person wearing a ski mask, gloves and a backpack early on the morning of Feb. 1.Here is a timeline of the major developments in the case.9:48 p.m., Jan 31.Nancy Guthrie Is Last SeenJust after 5:30 p.m., Ms. Guthrie took an Uber to the nearby home of her older daughter, Annie, and her son-in-law, Tommaso Cioni. The three spent about four hours together, eating dinner and playing games, before Mr. Cioni drove her home.Ms. Guthrie\u2019s garage door opened at 9:48 p.m. and closed two minutes later, according to the authorities. Mr. Cioni watched to make sure Ms. Guthrie made it safely inside. That was the last time anyone in her family saw or heard from her.1:47-2:28 a.m., Feb. 1Ms. Guthrie\u2019s Front Door Camera Is DisconnectedMs. Guthrie\u2019s front door camera was disconnected at 1:47 a.m. About 25 minutes later, a camera somewhere on her property detected motion, but recorded no video, because she did not have a subscription to the device\u2019s service provider.At 2:28 a.m., about 15 minutes after the camera was set off, Ms. Guthrie\u2019s pacemaker lost contact with her cellphone, which investigators would later find inside the house, suggesting this may have been about the time she was taken.ImageChris Nanos, the Pima County sheriff, said that his deputies saw \u201csomething at the home that didn\u2019t sit well,\u201d and that it became clear that Ms. Guthrie had been forced out against her will.Credit...Jan Sonnenmair\/Getty ImagesFeb. 1, morningMs. Guthrie Is Reported MissingWhen Ms. Guthrie did not arrive at a friend\u2019s house to watch a live-streamed church service on Sunday, the friend notified Ms Guthrie\u2019s family. Family members went to her house just before noon to check on her, discovered she was missing and called 911.The authorities found her phone, wallet, hearing aid, daily medication and car. At her front stoop, they found an empty mount where a doorbell camera had once hung, and on the tile below they saw spatters of blood, which DNA analysis later confirmed to be Ms. Guthrie\u2019s.Sheriff Chris Nanos of Pima County, Ariz., told The New York Times that investigators found even more worrying signs of violence at Ms. Guthrie\u2019s home. \u201cThere were things at that home that were of concern,\u201d he said. \u201cThat scene, there were things that, I thought, this doesn\u2019t sit well.\u201dHe declined to elaborate, but investigators spent the week combing through the home, its garage and the surrounding scrubland.Feb. 2A Ransom Note ArrivesRoughly 24 hours after the sheriff\u2019s department first posted a missing-person bulletin for Ms. Guthrie, a Tucson television station, KOLD, received a note claiming to be from her kidnapper. The station forwarded it to the authorities.The celebrity gossip site TMZ, which received a copy the next morning, reported that the letter demanded millions of dollars in Bitcoin for the release of Ms. Guthrie. Harvey Levin, the outlet\u2019s founder, described the letter on a broadcast as \u201cvery well constructed.\u201dFeb. 3Savannah Guthrie Withdraws From NBC\u2019s Olympics CoverageAs investigators acknowledged that they had few answers about who may have kidnapped Nancy Guthrie, NBC Sports said Savannah Guthrie would not be part of the network\u2019s coverage of the Winter Olympics in Italy. Mary Carillo took her place alongside Terry Gannon as a host of the network\u2019s coverage of the opening ceremony on Friday.Savannah Guthrie also has been absent from the \u201cToday\u201d set to be in Tucson with her family. Hoda Kotb, her co-anchor on \u201cToday\u201d from 2018 until 2025, returned to the show to fill in for her former colleague.Feb. 4ImageThe \u201cToday\u201d show host Savannah Guthrie, flanked by her siblings, Annie and Camron, said in an emotional video that she wanted to hear directly from anyone who may have taken her mother.Credit...Savannah Guthrie, via Instagram\/UGC, via, via ReutersMs. Guthrie\u2019s Children Plead for Her Safe ReturnMs. Guthrie\u2019s children recorded their first emotional address to their mother\u2019s kidnapper and posted it to Savannah Guthrie\u2019s Instagram account. Savannah Guthrie, trying to hold back tears as she read from a paper, said her family had heard about purported ransom letters that had been sent to news organizations.She said that they wanted to hear directly from anyone who may have taken their mother, but that they first needed proof she was alive.\u201cWe are ready to talk,\u201d she said, flanked by her older siblings, Annie and Camron Guthrie. \u201cHowever, we live in a world where voices and images are easily manipulated. We need to know, without a doubt, that she is alive, and that you have her.\u201dFeb. 6Another Note and Another VideoKOLD received another message from the supposed kidnappers. The message, which the station forwarded to the police and did not describe publicly, came from a different IP address than the ransom note, but the senders appeared to have used the same methods to mask their location and identity, the station said.Harvey Levin, the founder of the celebrity gossip site TMZ, which received a copy of the note the next morning, said it did not come with proof that Ms. Guthrie was alive, but it did begin by saying she was \u201csafe but scared.\u201dThe next day, the Guthrie siblings released another video. It was 20 seconds long and cryptic. Savannah Guthrie, speaking without a visible script, said into the camera: \u201cWe received your message, and we understand. We beg you now to return our mother to us so that we can celebrate with her. This is the only way we will have peace.\u201dFeb. 9Savannah Guthrie Says Her Family Is at \u2018An Hour of Desperation\u2019As the search entered its second week, Savannah Guthrie implored the public for help in finding her mother, saying in an Instagram video that she and her siblings believed that she was \u201cstill out there.\u201d\u201cWe are at an hour of desperation,\u201d she said.Feb. 10Surveillance Images Reveal a Masked FigureNew images and videos released on Tuesday showed a masked, armed person at Nancy Guthrie\u2019s doorstep on the night she was abducted, the first significant break in the investigation.The black-and-white footage, released by the F.B.I. and the Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department, depicts a person wearing a ski mask, gloves, a backpack and what appears to be a holstered handgun outside Ms. Guthrie\u2019s home, just north of Tucson. Investigators said the person was armed.Late in the day, the authorities detained a main for questioning in the case but released him early Wednesday. In an interview, the man said he had not heard about Ms. Guthrie\u2019s disappearance but hoped that she would be found safe. \u201cI hope they get the suspect, because I\u2019m not it,\u201d he said, speaking on the doorstep of a home in Rio Rico, Ariz., about an hour\u2019s drive south of Tucson.Show moreFeb. 6, 2026, 3:02 p.m. ETFeb. 6, 2026Michael LevensonImageThe disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of the \u201cToday\u201d anchor Savannah Guthrie, is the latest case of its kind to capture the nation\u2019s attention, reviving fears about kidnappings.Credit...Jan Sonnenmair\/Getty ImagesThe authorities in Arizona have said they are investigating the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of the \u201cToday\u201d show anchor Savannah Guthrie, as a possible kidnapping and are examining purported ransom notes sent to several media outlets.If she were abducted by a stranger, at age 84, that would make her case extremely unusual. Most kidnappings in the United States involve family or custody disputes, and a vast majority of the victims are children, experts say.Investigators in Ms. Guthrie\u2019s case have said they have not identified any suspects since she was last seen at her home outside Tucson, Ariz., on Saturday night. Savannah Guthrie and her siblings have released emotional videos in which they say that they are ready to talk to anyone who may have taken her, but that they first need proof she is alive.In general, kidnappings targeting older people are extremely rare and often involve a scam or financial motive, said Carrie Landau, a retired F.B.I. agent who focused on crimes against children and human trafficking investigations during her 21-year career. She recalled two cases she worked on in which adult victims were abducted and driven to A.T.M.s to withdraw money. One of the victims was also sexually assaulted, she said.Dr. Mark S. Lachs, a geriatrician at Weill Cornell Medicine, who studies elder abuse, said he was not aware of any studies about the prevalence of adult kidnappings in the United States. In general, reported abductions of older people usually turn out to be cases in which a family member or another person close to the victim has taken them and isolated them as part of some sort of dispute, he said.\u201cA stranger abduction is unusual in my experience,\u201d Dr. Lachs said.Most kidnappers also have some connection to the victim in cases of child abduction.Elizabeth Smart, for instance, was 14 when she was taken from her bedroom in Utah at knife point in 2002 and held captive for nine months. She was rescued after her sister realized that the voice she heard during the kidnapping belonged to a handyman who had worked at the Smarts\u2019 home.\u201cFor the most part, there is a knowledge of the family; there is an awareness\u201d among kidnappers, said John E. Bischoff III, vice president of the missing children division at the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.Cases in which a stranger grabs a victim on the street or takes someone from their home are \u201cexceedingly rare,\u201d and particularly challenging to investigate, Mr. Bischoff said. \u201cFor example, there is no built-in suspect pool,\u201d he said. \u201cWhere is the starting point if it is a true nonfamily abduction?\u201dMs. Guthrie\u2019s disappearance is the latest case of its kind to capture the nation\u2019s attention, reviving fears that have been stoked by the abductions of Charles A. Lindbergh\u2019s baby, Charles Augustus Jr.; Patty Hearst; J. Paul Getty III; Etan Patz; Adam Walsh; and Polly Klaas, to name a few.ImageAdam Walsh was 6 when he was abducted from a Florida mall and murdered in 1981. His father, John Walsh, later became the host of the television series \u201cAmerica\u2019s Most Wanted.\u201d Credit...Associated PressBy the mid-1980s, such cases, combined with misleading claims that as many as 50,000 children were being abducted by strangers every year, had fueled a panic that left \u201ca residue of anxiety about stranger abductions that lasted quite a while,\u201d said David Finkelhor, director of the Crimes against Children Research Center at the University of New Hampshire.The Denver Post won a Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for a series that examined the myth that most missing children had been abducted by strangers, and found that a majority were runaways or involved in custody disputes.Since then, Dr. Finkelhor said, the number of kidnappings has decreased, partly because the crime has become much more difficult to carry out in an era of surveillance cameras, license plate readers and cellphone tracking data.ImageElizabeth Smart was 14 when she was taken from her bedroom in Utah at knife point in 2002 and held captive for nine months.Credit...Jim Young\/ReutersResearch has shown that a few dozen to 100 children in the United States are kidnapped by strangers every year, compared to hundreds of thousands who are taken by family members, Dr. Finkelhor said.The National Crime Information Center logged the circumstances of 263,079 missing-person cases in 2022 and found that 95 percent had been coded as runaways, 0.9 percent as kidnapped by a noncustodial parent and 0.1 percent as kidnappings by a stranger.Mr. Bischoff said he was among those who grew up with the stereotypical image of a kidnapper being a stranger with aviator sunglasses and a van. \u201cI can\u2019t say those cases never happen because they do,\u201d he said. \u201cBut they\u2019re much rarer than the fear we were raised with.\u201dShow moreFeb. 6, 2026, 1:42 p.m. ETFeb. 6, 2026Reis Thebault and Neil VigdorImageSheriff Chris Nanos of Pima County, Ariz., has at times seemed surprised at the intense attention given to the search for Nancy Guthrie, the mother of the \u201cToday\u201d show anchor Nancy Guthrie.Credit...Rebecca Noble\/ReutersIt was Day 5 in the search for Nancy Guthrie, and the international media were packed into a small briefing room on the south side of Tucson, Ariz. Reporters had lined up early to hear Sheriff Chris Nanos of Pima County, and they were bursting with questions. Had the police made any headway? Did they have a suspect? Most of all: Was Ms. Guthrie still alive?Sheriff Nanos stepped to the lectern: \u201cI want to begin by offering our condolences,\u201d he said, pausing as the room collectively tensed.But, no, he was not breaking grim news in the case of Ms. Guthrie. A separate tragedy had occurred the night before, some 200 miles north, where an Arizona Department of Public Safety helicopter had crashed, killing two state troopers who were responding to a gunfight.The hunt for Ms. Guthrie was still stalled, turmoil was all around, and Sheriff Nanos was trying to navigate the maelstrom.On Thursday, as he addressed the growing horde of journalists for the first time in 48 hours, the pressure to find Ms. Guthrie was mounting and the story was only getting weirder. There was the impending deadline, imposed by a possibly bogus ransom note, demanding millions in Bitcoin by early that evening. The unsubstantiated reports of a person of interest. The removal, return and re-removal of crime scene tape around Ms. Guthrie\u2019s home.There was also the imminent arrival of the F.B.I. director, Kash Patel. The possibility that artificial intelligence might make any proof of life from a kidnapper difficult to trust. And, hovering over it all, the celebrity of Ms. Guthrie\u2019s daughter, Savannah Guthrie, a host of the \u201cToday\u201d show, whose association with the case has made it a national obsession.Sheriff Nanos has seemed surprised at the intense attention.\u201cI\u2019m not used to everybody hanging on my words and then trying to hold me accountable for what I say,\u201d he told reporters, somewhat sheepishly, at an earlier news conference.The sheriff is the face of an investigation that has the press and the public desperate for answers, refreshing social media feeds and flooding department inboxes with requests for information. And yet, until there\u2019s a break in the case \u2014 one that won\u2019t tip off the perpetrators if he reveals it \u2014 he can\u2019t offer much. So he rehashes and declines to elaborate, sometimes apologetically, noting the continuing nature of the search.Some wish he\u2019d just stop talking altogether.\u201cIt\u2019s important to have a reason to have a press conference, and not just have one,\u201d said Dr. Matt Heinz, a fellow Democrat who is a member of the Pima County board of supervisors. \u201cI can\u2019t watch them. I don\u2019t find them helpful, productive or reassuring.\u201dBut Thursday\u2019s briefing did yield some key clarifications.The F.B.I. said the authorities were taking seriously a ransom note sent to at least three news outlets that included facts about the crime scene and a specific timeline for its monetary demand.The initial deadline for payment was 5 p.m. on Thursday, said Heith Janke, the special agent in charge of the F.B.I.\u2019s Phoenix office. The note did not specify a time zone. Compounding the confusion, a second deadline was set for Monday. Mr. Janke declined to say what was threatened if the money were not sent in time.After consulting with the F.B.I., Ms. Guthrie\u2019s children recorded a video saying they were ready to talk with her abductors. As of Thursday evening, they had heard nothing.It was not clear whether the ransom note was genuine, but officials said at least one man had been arrested and charged with sending a different phony demand to the Guthrie family. The notoriety of the case and the digital tools that enable such fakery have added to the frenzy around the investigation.The handling of the crime scene has done the same. This week, after the police finished an initial sweep of Ms. Guthrie\u2019s house, officers removed the yellow tape that cordoned off the property. Journalists then took turns walking up to the front stoop and examining a splatter that Sheriff Nanos later confirmed to be Ms. Guthrie\u2019s blood.Private security eventually arrived to ward off trespassers. The police returned Wednesday afternoon and once again strung up crime scene tape. Officers spent a couple of hours searching the property, removed some items and left. They took the tape with them.Sheriff Nanos said on Thursday that, in hindsight, he should have instructed officers to keep the perimeter up to preserve the scene. When asked whether he was concerned about the possible contamination of evidence, he said, \u201cI\u2019ll let the courts worry about that.\u201dSheriff Nanos, whose elected position puts him over a department with about 1,500 employees, was born and raised in El Paso, Texas, where he began his career as a police officer in 1976. After about eight years working the beat in his hometown, he moved to Pima County, started as a corrections officer and steadily rose through the ranks.This week is not the sheriff\u2019s first time at the center of the news. Almost exactly 15 years ago, he was staring down a similar throng of television cameras as he answered questions about the shooting of Representative Gabrielle Giffords.More recently, he has made headlines for his handling of a series of scandals.The F.B.I. has probed his department for misuse of funds, inmates at Pima County jails have died at an alarming rate, the state attorney general\u2019s office has investigated his handling of a reported sexual assault by a deputy, and he has been accused of retaliating against his 2024 election opponent, who was a lieutenant in his department.His track record has alienated members of his own party, such as Dr. Heinz, the county supervisor, who has called on Sheriff Nanos to resign and endorsed his Republican opponent in the latest contest.But Sheriff Nanos has also won plaudits in his liberal county for refusing to aid federal immigration raids and for criticizing agents who conduct operations in masks. He thanked President Trump for committing so many federal resources to Ms. Guthrie\u2019s case, but he said in an interview that he wasn\u2019t holding his breath for a phone call from the White House.The sheriff has been working on the case constantly, triaging tips sent directly to his cellphone and carrying on a text exchange with Savannah Guthrie. \u201cThis is just going to be really devastating for her if we can\u2019t find her alive,\u201d Sheriff Nanos said.At the Thursday briefing, the biggest gathering yet, reporters peppered him with questions about the minutiae of the investigation. When asked if he should have called in regional and federal reinforcements sooner, Sheriff Nanos replied with a candor that was by then familiar.\u201cYou know, it\u2019s Monday morning quarterbacking,\u201d he said. \u201cI do it all the time, so you have the opportunity to do it for me. I\u2019ll take that hit.\u201dShow moreFeb. 4, 2026, 9:42 a.m. ETFeb. 4, 2026Reis ThebaultReporting from Tucson, Ariz.ImageNancy Guthrie\u2019s home became a focus for the fascination of neighbors and the nation alike.Credit...Jan Sonnenmair\/Getty ImagesIt began with the type of call the Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department fields every day: An 84-year-old woman gone from her home, a family in panic.But when the deputies arrived at the low-slung brick house in a quiet desert neighborhood north of Tucson, Ariz., on Sunday, they quickly realized that this was no routine missing persons case.There was the red splatter on the doorstep and damage, inside and out, that indicated an abduction. Then there was the identity of the lost woman, Nancy Guthrie, mother of \u201cToday\u201d show host Savannah Guthrie, one of the most-watched morning television anchors in America.Before long, news of the investigation was everywhere. It flooded social media feeds and ricocheted around group chats. Reporters from across the country descended on Tucson, a city of about 500,000 that is home to the University of Arizona and 70 miles from the Mexican border. Citizen detectives bombarded the sheriff\u2019s office with tips and theories, and President Trump on Wednesday called Savannah Guthrie with words of support.As the search slogged through its fourth day, much remained murky. The few details that emerged seemed ripped from a Hollywood script or a history book. The possible kidnapping of a celebrity\u2019s loved one \u2014 and the fixation that followed \u2014 conjured memories of the Lindbergh baby and Patty Hearst, crimes of a bygone era.But Ms. Guthrie\u2019s case has come with modern twists: Her abandoned cellphone and in-home security cameras, the drones that overflew the cactuses and palo verde trees of her subdivision hunting for clues. The supposed ransom note, first reported by the celebrity news site TMZ, demanding millions of dollars in Bitcoin. Local officials say they have a copy, and the F.B.I. is investigating. ImageSavannah Guthrie, here with her mother in 2015, is one of the Arizona city\u2019s most recognizable exports.Credit...Don Arnold\/WireImage, via Getty ImagesThe intense interest the case has yielded many new leads, but it has complicated the investigation as well.\u201cThis is really, for me, pretty new, all the media attention,\u201d Chris Nanos, the Pima County sheriff, told a phalanx of reporters at a Wednesday news briefing. He said he was receiving so many media inquiries that it had become a distraction. \u201cIt\u2019s just too tough, and it\u2019s not fair to the case,\u201d he added.Later that day, in an interview with The New York Times, Sheriff Nanos said that the spotlight has made this case unlike any other he has handled, but he has told his deputies to concentrate on their urgent work.\u201cThe reality is, it\u2019s another crime,\u201d he said. \u201cWe need to focus on the mission. We want to find Nancy, first and foremost. And we want to find her alive.\u201dAuthorities have said every hour is crucial. If Ms. Guthrie does not take her daily medication, they warned, the consequences could be fatal. The episode has shaken Tucson, where Ms. Guthrie moved with her family when her daughter Savannah was a baby. After her husband died in the 1980s, Ms. Guthrie raised her three teenagers there alone. Savannah Guthrie stayed close, attending college in Tucson and working there early in her career. The star anchor is a hometown hero, one of the city\u2019s most recognizable exports, who was poised to play a key role in NBC\u2019s coverage of the Olympics, whose opening ceremony is Friday. Since Nancy Guthrie\u2019s disappearance, her daughter has taken an absence from \u201cToday,\u201d and she has pulled out of the Winter Games. A church planned to hold a candlelight vigil for the family on Wednesday evening. \u201cShe\u2019s part of our community,\u201d Sheriff Nanos said. \u201cShe hasn\u2019t lived here for years, but boy, everybody watches that \u2018Today\u2019 show.\u201dOne of those longtime viewers, Connie Cohn, had not known that she lived next door to Savannah\u2019s sister and Ms. Guthrie\u2019s older daughter, Annie Guthrie. On Wednesday, as police officers and journalists canvassed the street near her house in north Tucson, Ms. Cohn peered out her window and wondered what the commotion was about.She called her husband, who took a guess: \u201cMaybe it has to do with Savannah Guthrie\u2019s mom,\u201d he told her.ImageChris Nanos, the Pima County sheriff, said that the national spotlight has made this case unlike any other he has handled.Credit...Jan Sonnenmair\/Getty ImagesMs. Cohn had been tracking developments in the search obsessively, refreshing news and social media. She grew up in Tucson, too, and followed Savannah Guthrie\u2019s career.\u201cI feel like I know her,\u201d she said.She was saddened to learn that the home next door was one of the last places Ms. Guthrie had been seen.On Saturday evening, Ms. Guthrie had dinner there with Annie Guthrie and her husband, Sheriff Nanos said. About 9:45 p.m., Ms. Guthrie\u2019s son-in-law dropped her off at her home a few miles away and made sure she made it inside safely, the sheriff said.When Ms. Guthrie did not show up for church Sunday morning, someone there contacted her family, who went to the house to check on her. Ms. Guthrie\u2019s wallet, cellphone and car were still there, authorities said, but she was missing.Police ruled out the idea that she might have mistakenly wandered outside and gotten lost: She has a medical condition that limits her mobility and \u201cis of sound mind,\u201d Sheriff Nanos said. When his deputies arrived, they saw \u201csomething at the home that didn\u2019t sit well,\u201d he added, and it became clear that she had been forced out against her will.Authorities have been in close contact with relatives, who have all cooperated with the investigation, Sheriff Nanos said. The sheriff said it was too soon to say whether the abduction was random or targeted, but he called the case extraordinary.\u201cWe don\u2019t see those kinds of monsters here,\u201d he said.On Ms. Guthrie\u2019s block, an affluent area where the homes have large lots and views of the Catalina Mountains, neighbors have shared security camera footage with police and have even helped search for Ms. Guthrie in the foothills themselves. Police have not said whether the footage has turned up new evidence.ImageReporters from across the country descended. Group chats exploded. Credit...Jan Sonnenmair\/Getty ImagesThe scene on Tuesday blended the ominous and the everyday. After the police finished their work at Ms. Guthrie\u2019s home, dried red liquid remained visible on the front doorstep. An Arizona Republic reporter watched an Amazon delivery driver drop off a package at the stoop. It was addressed to Ms. Guthrie.Jorge Gomez, a recent retiree who has lived in the area for about 10 years, said the news was unnerving. \u201cWe are heartbroken,\u201d he said. \u201cI can\u2019t believe what the family\u2019s going through.\u201dMr. Gomez\u2019s own house has an alarm system and outdoor cameras, but since Ms. Guthrie was taken, he has been double-checking that they work every night. He has found himself on edge in a neighborhood that has always been tranquil.That serenity is what drew many of his older neighbors to live there, including Ms. Guthrie. In a November \u201cToday\u201d segment, filmed in Tucson, she said the family decided to settle in the city in part because of its natural beauty.\u201cThe air, the quality of life,\u201d she said, smiling at her daughter. \u201cIt\u2019s laid back and gentle.\u201dLourdes Medrano contributed reporting from Tucson. Show moreFeb. 3, 2026, 8:50 a.m. ETFeb. 3, 2026Claire MosesImageLaw enforcement officers outside the home of Nancy Guthrie near Tucson, Ariz., on Feb. 2.Credit...Sejal Govindarao\/Associated PressThe authorities in Arizona are searching for Nancy Guthrie, 84, the mother of the \u201cToday\u201d show anchor Savannah Guthrie, who has been missing since Feb. 1. Her disappearance, which has gripped the nation, is being investigated as a kidnapping.Ms. Guthrie was last seen at her home near Tucson on Jan. 31. Earlier that evening, she had dinner at the home of her older daughter and her son-in-law, who dropped her off at her house around 9:50 p.m., said Chris Nanos, the Pima County sheriff.A masked person arrived at her home in the early hours of Feb. 1, around the same time a doorbell camera was disconnected and removed, according to doorbell camera footage released by the authorities.Here\u2019s what we know.The authorities released surveillance images of a masked suspect.ImageThis image was recovered from cameras at the home of Nancy Guthrie the morning that she was reported missing near Tucson, Ariz.Credit...Pima County Sheriff's DepartmentOn Tuesday, the Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department released surveillance images from Ms. Guthrie\u2019s doorstep showing a person standing at her front door, wearing a ski mask, gloves and a backpack on the morning of Feb. 1. The sheriff\u2019s department said the person in the images was armed. One of the images shows the person wearing what appears to be a holstered pistol.The F.B.I. later released video footage showing the person approaching Ms. Guthrie\u2019s doorbell camera on the night of her abduction, blocking it with a gloved hand and then appearing to try to use some leaves to obscure the camera.Earlier, the authorities had said that the tampering with Ms. Guthrie\u2019s doorbell camera, which was disconnected at 1:47 a.m. on Feb. 1, had deprived investigators of crucial evidence. A timeline, but few clues.The investigation into Ms. Guthrie\u2019s disappearance began after she failed to arrive at a friend\u2019s house to watch a live-streamed church service on Feb. 1. The friend notified Ms. Guthrie\u2019s family, who went to her home in Catalina Foothills, an unincorporated community near the Santa Catalina Mountains just north of Tucson. When they did not find her there just before noon, they called 911. Early in the investigation, Sheriff Nanos described Ms. Guthrie\u2019s home as \u201ca crime scene,\u201d adding that \u201cwe saw some things at the home that were concerning to us.\u201dMs. Guthrie has limited mobility and requires medication every 24 hours, but is mentally sharp, according to the authorities.Ms. Guthrie\u2019s pacemaker app showed that it had been disconnected from her phone at 2:28 a.m., indicating she was no longer near the phone, which was left inside her house.Ms. Guthrie, whose daughter Savannah had included her in several \u201cToday\u201d show segments, was described as 5 feet 5 inches tall with brown hair and blue eyes, and vulnerable.ImageMs. Guthrie was described in a missing person\u2019s notice as \u201cvulnerable.\u201dCredit...Pima County Sheriff\u2019s Department, via Associated PressA suspect was detained, and then released.The authorities released a man early Wednesday whom they detained during a traffic stop, more than 10 days into the search for Ms. Guthrie. In an interview, the man said he had not heard about Ms. Guthrie\u2019s disappearance but hoped that she was found safe. \u201cI hope they get the suspect, because I\u2019m not it,\u201d he said, speaking on the doorstep of his wife and mother-in-law\u2019s home in Rio Rico, Ariz.Sheriff Nanos said in a statement that the F.B.I. and the his office had carried out a \u201ccourt-authorized search\u201d in Rio Rico that was related to the investigation. The town is about an hour\u2019s drive south of Tucson.The Guthries said they would pay a ransom.Savannah Guthrie and her siblings have released a series of videos pleading with whoever is involved in her mother\u2019s disappearance to reach out to them. They said they would listen to ransom demands.On Saturday, Savannah said in a video on social media that she and her siblings, Annie and Camron, were willing to pay for their mother\u2019s return.\u201cWe beg you now to return our mother to us so that we can celebrate with her,\u201d Savannah Guthrie said. \u201cThis is the only way we will have peace. This is very valuable to us, and we will pay.\u201dThen, in a video on Monday, after the search for Nancy Guthrie entered its second week, Savannah Guthrie said she believed that her mother was \u201cstill out there.\u201dIn the first video that Savannah Guthrie and her siblings posted, she said that they were willing to listen to ransom demands if they received proof that their mother was alive. \u201cWe are ready to talk,\u201d Savannah Guthrie said, adding: \u201cWe need to know, without a doubt, that she is alive and that you have her.\u201dThe F.B.I. said this week that it was \u201cnot aware of any continued communication between the Guthrie family and suspected kidnappers.\u201dOfficials are investigating a message.The authorities said last week that they were reviewing a message sent to a Tucson television station, but they did not confirm whether it was related to a purported ransom note sent to several news outlets in the days after Ms. Guthrie\u2019s disappearance, which demanded millions of dollars in Bitcoin. A deadline mentioned in a ransom note passed last week, and it remains unclear whether the person who sent that ransom demand is connected to Nancy Guthrie\u2019s abduction.Savannah Guthrie withdrew from NBC\u2019s Olympics coverage.Savannah Guthrie, 54, is best known as one of the anchors of the NBC morning show \u201cToday,\u201d a job she has held since 2012. She joined NBC News in 2007, after working in local news and as a lawyer. She did not go to Italy this month for the Milan-Cortina Olympics, where she had been expected to play a key role in NBC\u2019s coverage of the Games. Savannah Guthrie grew up and attended college in Tucson, Ariz. She lives in New York with her husband, the communications consultant Michael Feldman, and their two children.Neil Vigdor, Reis Thebault, Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs, John Yoon, Jonathan Wolfe and Hannah Ziegler contributed reporting.Show more", "ai_headline": "Live Updates: Search for Nancy Guthrie", "ai_simplified_title": "Authorities Investigate Nancy Guthrie Disappearance Kidnapping Case", "ai_excerpt": "Authorities are investigating the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, mother of Savannah Guthrie, as a possible kidnapping. Surveillance footage of a masked person at her home has been released. A man detained for questioning was later released.", "ai_subject_tags": [ "Kidnapping", "Missing Person", "Crime", "Investigation", "Savannah Guthrie", "Bitcoin", "Arizona" ], "ai_context_type": "News", "ai_context_details": { "tone": "informative", "perspective": "neutral", "audience": "general", "credibility_indicators": [ "expert_quotes", "reporting from the scene", "multiple sources" ] }, "ai_source_vector": [ -0.033879198, 0.00461495, -0.028563688, -0.038642295, 0.006858894, -0.014017352, -0.009696038, 0.027755866, -0.0046460712, -0.006049641, -0.00036545782, -0.016314983, 0.03607626, -0.024182085, 0.09856334, 0.006246066, -0.007527064, -0.0052804216, 0.016452465, -0.010626883, -0.00047735224, -0.011806646, 0.008988775, -0.008345242, -0.007434551, -0.008939969, -0.0045037656, -0.017778756, 0.04505992, 0.014798694, -0.025710316, 0.0035511, 0.02073424, 0.0065430296, 0.012154769, 0.027957948, -0.0076689348, -0.01735522, -0.025158253, -0.015260747, -0.02383456, 0.011670837, 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<html lang="en" data-nyt-compute-assignment="fallback" xmlns:og="http://opengraphprotocol.org/schema/" class="nytapp-vi-liveblog" data-rh="lang"><head> <meta charset="utf-8"> <title>Nancy Guthrie Live Updates: Man Detained for Questioning Is Released - The New York Times</title> <meta data-rh="true" name="robots" content="noarchive, max-image-preview:large"><meta data-rh="true" name="description" content="The man was detained during a traffic stop hours after chilling videos of a suspect were released. But the authorities have not said what led them to question him in the case."><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:url" content="https://www.nytimes.com/live/2026/02/11/us/nancy-guthrie-case-updates"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:title" content="Nancy Guthrie Live Updates: Man Detained for Questioning Is Released"><meta data-rh="true" property="twitter:description" content="The man was detained during a traffic stop hours after chilling videos of a suspec... - Parsed Content
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PinnedNicholas Bogel-BurroughsChelsia Rose Marcius and Jill CowanNicholas Bogel-Burroughs reported from Rio Rico, Ariz.A flurry of activity related to the investigation of Nancy Guthrieβs disappearance ended early Wednesday with the release of a man detained during a traffic stop near the Mexican border and questioned for several hours by authorities in Arizona.The manβs release, hours after chilling video footage of a suspect was provided to the public, appeared to leave investigators no closer to solving the case that has mesmerized much of America since the mother of βTodayβ show anchor Savannah Guthrie vanished 11 days ago.In an interview early Wednesday after he was released by the authorities, the man, who identified himself only as Carlos, said he had not heard about the Guthrie case. βI hope they get the suspect, because Iβm not it,β he said, speaking on the doorstep of his wife and mother-in-lawβs home in Rio Rico, Ariz., about an hourβs drive south of Ms. Guthrieβs suburban h...
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Completed Started: Feb 15, 2026 4:41 PM Completed: Feb 15, 2026 4:51 PM
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Claims from this Source (152)
All claims extracted from this source document.
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Simplified: Inmates at Pima County jails have died at alarming rate
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6e-0c63-4dc7-bbe0-c6a69ad663f9Simplified: If she were abducted by a stranger at age 84 that would make her case extremely unusual
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6e-26e1-4afd-a83f-da7da2d32718Simplified: Most kidnappings in the United States involve family or custody disputes a vast majority of the victims are children experts say
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e73-babf-4cea-9cd3-4941b2d7feb6Simplified: Police removed yellow tape after initial sweep of Ms. Guthrieβs house
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π€ Chris Nanos π News Article π a1163e67-b0c3-40ac-80d1-96f1d849db1bSimplified: Sheriff Nanos described Nancy Guthrie's home as a crime scene
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1163e74-2185-4936-b162-ca8643323f67Simplified: Private security arrived to ward off trespassers
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e74-5c68-4b5c-880c-34d03bae85cfSimplified: Police returned Wednesday afternoon and strung up crime scene tape
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e74-9cac-4a49-853f-f44a41d9095cSimplified: Officers spent a couple of hours searching the property removed some items and left
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e74-da05-4725-ae63-5410c7618462Simplified: They took the tape with them
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π€ Sheriff Nanos π News Article π a1163e75-1acc-4baa-b58c-97658aa86902Simplified: Sheriff Nanos said he should have instructed officers to keep the perimeter up to preserve the scene
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1163e75-6289-4ff9-a72c-a351733e30d0Simplified: Sheriff Nanos was born and raised in El Paso Texas where he began his career as a police officer in 1976
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1163e75-8ed0-4f9f-851e-ea550aef2777Simplified: Sheriff Nanos moved to Pima County started as a corrections officer and rose through the ranks
-
π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Legal , Investigation π a1163f3a-aee3-4893-a6d8-e47ba8ffda01Simplified: State attorney general's office investigated Sheriff Nanos' handling of reported sexual assault by deputy
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1163e76-60da-4879-a929-0b49d778caf0Simplified: Sheriff Nanos's track record has alienated members of his own party such as Dr Heinz who has called on Sheriff Nanos to resign and endorsed his Republ...
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Simplified: On Saturday evening Ms Guthrie had dinner there with Annie Guthrie and her husband Sheriff Nanos said
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e75-f321-49b5-a652-71067bcdc07cSimplified: 15 years ago Sheriff Nanos answered questions about the shooting of Representative Gabrielle Giffords
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d36-e5bd-4136-8f9c-3cd33450bb16Simplified: A man was released after being detained near the Mexican border and questioned by authorities in Arizona
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d37-4349-45c4-b3fd-19835b01575eSimplified: The man's release left investigators no closer to solving the case
-
π€ Carlos π News Article π a1165d37-91b5-4f90-9a9c-9eda5d9324ffSimplified: Carlos said he had not heard about the Guthrie case
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π€ Investigators π News Article π a1163e62-859a-48d2-af24-0ec8804aaeccSimplified: Investigators said the person was armed
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Social Media , Missing Person π a11631eb-cb06-4828-b5bd-211d4d25efdcSimplified: Savannah Guthrie posted a new video on Instagram on Monday pleading for public help finding her mother Nancy Guthrie
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e78-492a-4120-a693-ebbe07fbdee5Simplified: They have said they are open to ransom offers but first would need proof that their mother was still alive
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d38-1849-4b04-ae3f-3910020ce638Simplified: The F.B.I. and the Pima County Sheriffβs Department carried out a court-authorized search in Rio Rico
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d38-382e-4ac1-ac24-09b44f5eba11Simplified: A woman said her son-in-law had been delivering food when stopped by police
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e62-a056-4a90-9855-8470a9064b68Simplified: In a video from Ms Guthrie's doorbell camera the person can be seen approaching Ms Guthrie's door and trying to block the camera with a gloved hand
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d38-6f47-4281-95b5-88f610c6ce1cSimplified: The camera was eventually disabled making the footage initially inaccessible
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d38-9aee-43cc-a4d8-bfe4a7eb6c6fSimplified: Ms Guthrieβs daughter Annie and her son-in-law were the last people to see her before she vanished
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π€ The police π News Article π a1163e62-d072-4d90-93fb-e5a862695f49Simplified: Police said the camera was disconnected shortly before the abduction on Feb 1
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Investigation , Crime Scene π a11631ec-22b8-42a0-a6bf-7423fa2c761aSimplified: Investigators found a splatter of her blood on front stoop and said her doorbell camera had been disconnected and removed shortly before she was taken...
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Simplified: Authorities said they were reviewing a message sent to Tucson television station KOLD
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d39-29be-40e1-93cc-f5f556dc7b64Simplified: Digital currencies have become a common tool in ransom demands and are difficult to trace
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1165d39-4781-4824-85e0-b63372a501feSimplified: Several news outlets received a ransom note demanding payment to a Bitcoin wallet
-
π€ KGUN π News Article π a1165d39-6406-4f18-ae88-021f0fc052adSimplified: KGUN said the wallet had received a payment for less than $300
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e64-21cc-4e85-ba57-3e41e22dbfacSimplified: It remains unclear if the notes sent to the news outlets were actually sent by the abductor
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d39-9245-481f-8c9f-788c805a59d9Simplified: Bitcoin has become a common payment method in extortion schemes since 2009
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1165d39-bd57-4aec-b820-3db87c61a9e2Simplified: Bitcoin transactions do not require names or physical locations unlike bank transfers
-
π€ The author π News Article π a1165d39-f037-4402-ba5f-1929c63ebb8eSimplified: Tracing a cryptocurrency transfer presents two main challenges
-
Simplified: Bitcoin operates on a decentralized public blockchain.
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Law Enforcement , Cryptocurrency π a1165d3a-5096-4d27-b6ff-b45d19f8f66cSimplified: Authorities may gather identifying details such as IP addresses when a wallet was created and how frequently it has been used
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Law Enforcement , Cybersecurity , Finance π a1165d3a-74b5-4113-8cc6-f615c02ea7fcSimplified: In 2021 federal officials recovered most of the Bitcoin ransom paid by Colonial Pipeline after a ransomware attack shut down the company's computer sy...
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Simplified: Authorities did not disclose how they retrieved the funds
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Investigation π a1165d3a-f7d5-4719-bbd1-2e6b2cd75fb1Simplified: He was held for several hours before being released with wrists swollen from handcuffs
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Investigation π a1165d3b-168c-4dfe-afee-82b2847ed3a2Simplified: Carlos gave an account of his detention in a brief interview on the porch of his home in Rio Rico
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Investigation π a1165d3b-7927-48ca-9d3e-b1d583ed8819Simplified: Doorbell camera footage of a masked man at Nancy Guthrie's front door was made public on Tuesday 10 days after her family last saw her
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Investigation π a1165d3c-ab3b-4189-9cab-ecc99aef5c71Simplified: The person wears a ski mask gloves a backpack and a holstered handgun
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π€ Joint statement from the sheriffβs department and F.B.I. π News Article π a1163e63-033d-420b-b51a-402132c1b66cSimplified: A joint statement said investigators had eventually recovered the video by accessing residual data
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Simplified: The video offers a clue
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Investigation π a1165d3d-4641-4227-9afc-ae7702358f6fSimplified: The video is stamped in the upper right corner with the name Nest a home electronics brand that is part of Google
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Simplified: An internet-enabled Nest doorbell can record video and alert homeowners to sounds and movements on their doorsteps
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Simplified: Owners can pay a monthly subscription to get premium features like long-term video history
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π€ Adam Wandt π News Article π·οΈ Law Enforcement , Technology π a1165d3d-afd5-413b-8d30-d217f427e99dSimplified: If Ms Guthrie had a paid subscription the authorities might have had access to footage stored on her account
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π€ Pima County sheriff π News Article π a1163e62-eae5-4df3-bb31-1373dc964315Simplified: Pima County sheriff said investigators were unable to retrieve any footage from Ms Guthrie's surveillance cameras because she did not pay for a subscr...
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Simplified: The three spent about four hours together eating dinner and playing games before Mr Cioni drove her home
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Simplified: Historical footage would probably be stored only on a server somewhere in one of Google's vast data centers
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Law Enforcement , Legal π a1165d3e-1d59-49cb-a50e-c20564976085Simplified: They may not have been required to because the kidnapping of Ms Guthrie might be considered an exigent circumstance a legal exception to the warrant r...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Investigation π a1165d3e-4008-4545-acd9-8250e5a0d0cdSimplified: Google did not immediately respond to questions about the footage but Mr Wandt speculated that finding the data could have taken days
-
Simplified: Sometimes those requests are clear and simple
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Simplified: However they often are not and they might take more than one back-and-forth
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π€ Mr. Wandt π News Article π·οΈ Technology , Investigation π a1165d3e-bc91-4ef8-8474-dff8ccfbeb5bSimplified: The company might need a day or two or three to figure out how to get that data
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Simplified: Doorbell camera videos total 44 seconds
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Simplified: It was the type of Saturday evening that Nancy Guthrie treasured dinner and game night at the home of her eldest daughter and son-in-law
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π€ The F.B.I. and Pima County Sheriffβs Department π Website Article π·οΈ General π a1165d3e-fa12-4f5f-aaf5-1c4ee4d47638Simplified: The F.B.I. and Pima County Sheriff's Department said they managed to get the footage on Tuesday morning after working with private companies and acces...
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Simplified: They lived near each other in the unincorporated desert communities north of Tucson Ariz and Ms Guthrie arrived by Uber just after 530 pm on Jan 31
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Simplified: Ms Guthrie said We are ready to talk however we live in a world where voices and images are easily manipulated we need to know without a doubt that sh...
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Simplified: The person at the front door is wearing a ski mask a backpack gloves and a jacket
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Simplified: Despite trying to block the camera a few of the person's features are visible eyes eyebrows and part of the mouth
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Simplified: At 948 pm her garage door opened according to a timeline from the authorities
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Simplified: Ms Guthrie believed her mother was still out there
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Simplified: The authorities have closed and reopened the crime scene at the house multiple times
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Simplified: The search has become a sensation fueled by Savannah Guthrieβs fame and the many questions that remain
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Simplified: It was not clear whether the message was related to a purported ransom note sent to news outlets in the days following her disappearance
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Simplified: After the police finished their work at Ms Guthrie's home dried red liquid remained visible on the front doorstep
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163f3a-7a0e-47ce-9b04-7e413983d03bSimplified: The F.B.I. has probed him
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Simplified: Mr Cioni watched to make sure Ms Guthrie made it safely inside
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And they have acknowledged that they do not know where she might be or whether she is still alive.0.500Simplified: They have acknowledged that they do not know where she might be or whether she is still alive
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Simplified: Ms. Guthrie's Front Door Camera Is Disconnected
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Simplified: About 25 minutes later a camera on her property detected motion but recorded no video because she did not have a subscription to the device's service...
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Simplified: At 2:28 a.m. about 15 minutes after the camera was set off Ms. Guthrie's pacemaker lost contact with her cellphone suggesting this may have been about...
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Simplified: When his deputies arrived they saw something at the home that didn't sit well and it became clear that she had been forced out against her will
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Simplified: Police ruled out the idea that she might have mistakenly wandered outside and gotten lost she has a medical condition that limits her mobility and is...
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π€ Sheriff Chris Nanos π Website Article π·οΈ General π a1165d40-38da-4e00-a289-9a17bb5e8972Simplified: That scene there were things that I thought this doesn't sit well
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Investigators spent the week combing through the home, its garage and the surrounding scrubland.0.500Simplified: Investigators spent the week combing through the home its garage and the surrounding scrubland
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Simplified: Roughly 24 hours after the sheriff's department first posted a missing-person bulletin for Ms Guthrie a Tucson television station KOLD received a note...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Media , Employment π a1163eec-a36c-44e0-8ac0-66a02215e320Simplified: Savannah Guthrie withdrew from NBC Olympics coverage
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Media , Employment π a1163eed-72cf-4308-a7f1-32fd96876ad0Simplified: Mary Carillo took Ms Guthrieβs place alongside Terry Gannon as host of networkβs coverage of opening ceremony on Friday
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π€ Savannah Guthrie π News Article π a1163e65-a55c-46a4-bff4-089a5e031a90Simplified: Savannah Guthrie asked her mother's abductor to return her so the family can celebrate and said the family would pay
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π€ Savannah Guthrie π News Article π·οΈ Media , Investigation π a1165d41-21ff-4f2b-b2ef-a1355ac81a47Simplified: Savannah Guthrie said her family heard about purported ransom letters sent to news organizations
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6c-a461-4116-af6c-561365544d9fSimplified: The message came from a different IP address than the ransom note senders appeared to use the same methods to mask location and identity
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6c-2a5a-4919-b570-5903bb71da22Simplified: The ransom note did begin by saying she was safe but scared.
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6d-495f-44f7-83db-9c433f36c63aSimplified: Savannah Guthrie said into the camera This is the only way we will have peace
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e68-0437-4cfe-9202-fc2eb130c9e6Simplified: By working with private sector partners they recovered previously inaccessible images showing an armed individual tampering with the camera at Nancy G...
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Simplified: Authorities detained man for questioning in case but released him early Wednesday
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π€ Carrie Landau π News Article π a1163e6e-63f7-449f-a7c5-3d91070105a0Simplified: Kidnappings targeting older people are extremely rare and often involve a scam or financial motive Carrie Landau said
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π€ Carrie Landau π News Article π a1163e6e-7bbb-4ab9-9b21-7da7e7d7a414Simplified: She recalled two cases she worked on in which adult victims were abducted and driven to ATMs to withdraw money
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π€ Carrie Landau π News Article π a1163e6e-9466-47b9-b2d3-e3cae3d492a8Simplified: One of the victims was also sexually assaulted she said
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6f-28a5-4e58-92aa-7be931a29115Simplified: She was rescued after her sister realized that the voice she heard during the kidnapping belonged to a handyman who had worked at the Smarts' home
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π€ John E. Bischoff III π News Article π a1163e6f-7bf7-49d2-8833-ac50ca481289Simplified: For the most part there is a knowledge of the family there is an awareness among kidnappers John E Bischoff III said
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Simplified: There is no built-in suspect pool in true nonfamily abductions
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6f-fd6f-45ce-a276-f878e8ec301bSimplified: Ms Guthrie's disappearance is the latest case of its kind to capture the nation's attention reviving fears that have been stoked by the abductions of...
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Child Safety π a1163e70-2052-4e5f-bd93-916ab1bbeaaeSimplified: Adam Walsh was abducted from a Florida mall and murdered in 1981 when he was 6
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Simplified: John Walsh later became host of television series America's Most Wanted
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π€ David Finkelhor π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Child Safety , Psychology π a1163e70-8f7a-4809-bbdd-c21be8957212Simplified: Cases combined with misleading claims fueled panic about stranger abductions by mid-1980s
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Media , Crime , Child Safety π a1163e70-d793-426e-a490-5fad17254a1eSimplified: Denver Post won Pulitzer Prize in 1986 for series examining myth that most missing children were abducted by strangers
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π€ Dr. Finkelhor π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Technology π a1163e71-3631-42cc-87aa-11be6add17aaSimplified: Number of kidnappings has decreased since then partly because crime is more difficult to carry out
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6f-0698-47f5-8fc1-61a79cc62a61Simplified: Elizabeth Smart was 14 when she was taken from her bedroom in Utah at knife point in 2002 and held captive for nine months
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Statistics π a1163e72-502c-4039-ba7c-25f2a329edbfSimplified: National Crime Information Center logged 263079 missing person cases in 2022
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Simplified: Cases happen
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π€ Mr. Bischoff π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Psychology π a1163e72-e564-4535-a865-79a44185864aSimplified: Cases are much rarer than fear
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π€ Heith Janke π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Law Enforcement π a1163e73-2f11-4575-8345-d5ff90dc40f1Simplified: Initial deadline for payment was 5 pm on Thursday
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163f39-b4f7-476a-8023-6437355f367aSimplified: The note did not specify a time zone
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e6d-c9d1-479d-835b-1d09ae11620eSimplified: The supposed ransom note's second deadline sometime on Monday loomed
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π€ Savannah Guthrie π News Article π·οΈ Missing Person , Personal Statement π a1163eeb-e4e6-4f46-8027-732960a17028Simplified: Savannah Guthrie said they are ready to talk but need proof that her mother is alive
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Simplified: As of Thursday evening they had heard nothing
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Crime , Law Enforcement π a1163e73-7783-4815-b257-a5fe448d7ea6Simplified: Officials said at least one man had been arrested and charged with sending different phony demand to Guthrie family
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e77-40e3-45aa-b250-10ea78a1d4d4Simplified: Sheriff Nanos has won plaudits for refusing to aid federal immigration raids and for criticizing agents who conduct operations in masks
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π€ Sheriff Nanos π News Article π a1163e77-586a-45fc-b94b-2e729ec90340Simplified: Sheriff Nanos thanked President Trump for committing federal resources to Ms Guthrieβs case but said he wasnβt holding his breath for a phone call fro...
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Simplified: Sheriff Nanos said he wasn't holding his breath for phone call from White House
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e77-70b0-4a14-9218-9aee38b78adeSimplified: Sheriff has been working on the case constantly triaging tips sent directly to his cellphone and carrying on a text exchange with Savannah Guthrie
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π€ Sheriff Nanos π News Article π a1163e77-865b-4211-97d9-e15a1dce0e4bSimplified: Sheriff Nanos said it will be devastating for her if they canβt find her alive
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e77-9b42-43e3-9926-29a30eb709a3Simplified: Reporters peppered him with questions about the minutiae of the investigation at the Thursday briefing
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e7c-b14a-424b-9dfa-f4f03fd8c9cdSimplified: Her abandoned cellphone and in-home security cameras the drones that overflew the cactuses and palo verde trees of her subdivision hunting for clues
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e7c-c9c1-4415-b0d0-3575821f824bSimplified: Local officials say they have a copy and the F
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d49-f0a3-4fec-9f4b-bbbadf8cbb89Simplified: Savannah Guthrie is one of Arizona city's most recognizable exports
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Simplified: Intense interest in the case has yielded new leads but complicated the investigation
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π€ Chris Nanos π News Article π a1165d4a-211e-4380-af95-7d168ef24178Simplified: Chris Nanos Pima County sheriff said he was receiving many media inquiries that became a distraction
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π€ Chris Nanos π News Article π a1165d4a-4cb7-4578-aad5-59379e3b4635Simplified: It is another crime
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Simplified: We must focus on delivering the change we promised the country
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π€ FBI π News Article π a1163e66-4267-4d01-9445-7126cb3e269fSimplified: Someone has information to help bring Nancy home and the FBI needs that person to share it
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π€ Savannah Guthrie π News Article π a1163e63-497f-498c-ab68-ab4f7518c147Simplified: Someone out there recognizes this person she wrote We believe she is still out there Bring her home
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π€ Authorities π News Article π a1165d4a-bb61-4b3e-bfdc-2f7a09007f59Simplified: Authorities said every hour is crucial
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π€ Her family π News Article π a1163e64-3d08-41df-ae83-5552dcfb3af3Simplified: Nancy Guthrie is mentally sharp but has trouble moving and takes daily medication without which she could die
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The authorities described her as mentally sharp and said this was not a dementia-related case.1.000π€ The author π News Article π a1163e68-4f36-4354-98c2-5e8704ab232dSimplified: Authorities described her as mentally sharp and said this was not a dementia-related case
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π€ Sheriff Nanos π News Article π a1165d4b-1a3f-4402-90a4-657b80763e48Simplified: Deputies saw something at the home that did not sit well and it became clear she had been forced out against her will
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π€ Sheriff Nanos π News Article π a1165d4b-598c-4940-b168-c0fbbd4f0af9Simplified: Sheriff said it was too soon to say whether abduction was random or targeted but called the case extraordinary
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π€ Sheriff Nanos π News Article π a1165d4b-8cd7-42bb-b17b-4f0697ee3116Simplified: We do not see those kinds of monsters here
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Simplified: Neighbors shared security camera footage with police and helped search for Ms Guthrie in the foothills
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d4b-da12-4f00-a234-6c4922ef9620Simplified: Police have not said whether footage turned up new evidence
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Simplified: Since Ms Guthrie was taken he has been double-checking that they work every night
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π€ The author π News Article π a1165d4c-2416-49dd-96c7-0653aff66d56Simplified: He has found himself on edge in a tranquil neighborhood
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Simplified: Her disappearance is being investigated as a kidnapping
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π€ Chris Nanos π News Article π a1163e66-ebd9-47e1-b0f9-f0536021df1bSimplified: Nancy Guthrie had dinner at her older daughter's home and was dropped off at her house around 9:50 PM
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Simplified: Authorities released surveillance images of a masked suspect
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e64-8435-4a18-89ac-f672fff92983Simplified: Guthrie and the friend had planned to watch a livestream of a church service together
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e68-1eb9-4761-934d-caa50f01e7a2Simplified: Nancy Guthrie's pacemaker app showed it was disconnected from her phone at 2:28 AM indicating she was no longer near the phone
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π€ The author π News Article π a1163e68-370f-4927-a3b9-02820429af62Simplified: Nancy Guthrie was described as 5 feet 5 inches tall with brown hair and blue eyes and vulnerable
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Media , Employment π a1163eec-bb06-4387-a6ca-c876004e6ee1Simplified: Savannah Guthrie is best known as one of the anchors of NBC morning show Today a job she has held since 2012
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π€ The author π News Article π·οΈ Media , Employment π a1163eec-d4f7-4239-8358-b96085091cd8Simplified: Savannah Guthrie joined NBC News in 2007 after working in local news and as lawyer