Two weeks after Nancy Guthrie mysteriously disappeared, her daughter Savannah is pleading for her secure return.
“I wanted to come back on. It’s been two weeks since our mom was taken, and I just wanted to come back on and say that we still have hope. We still imagine, and I desired to say to whoever has her, or knows where she is, that it’s never too late and also you’re not lost or alone,” the Today show host, 54, said in a video shared via Instagram on Sunday, February 15.
As she held back tears, Savannah addressed her mother’s would-be kidnapper or kidnappers directly, saying, “It isn’t too late to do the proper thing and we’re here. We imagine. We imagine within the essential goodness [of] every human being, and it’s never too late.”
Nancy was taken from her Tucson, Arizona, home within the early hours of February 1. She was last seen by Savannah’s sister, Annie Guthrie, who had dropped Nancy off at home following a family dinner the previous evening.
Within the video — the fourth released by Savannah within the wake of Nancy’s disappearance — the TV personality was seen sitting on the bottom of an outside garden. She wore minimal makeup and her eyes appeared heavy and bleary.
The video was published just hours after Fox News Digital reported that local authorities had deployed a digital scanner to assist track Nancy’s pacemaker. The outlet stated that the continued search introduced the “high-tech Bluetooth scanner placed on the underside” of “helicopters” in an try and track the pacemaker’s signals.
“The helicopters fly low, typically in grid patterns, at a slow pace to select up signals,” the outlet reported, adding that a helicopter was seen flying “near Guthrie’s home” three days after she was reported missing (It is just not known, nevertheless, if the bird was fitted with the scanner at the moment.)
Also on Sunday, Matt Finn, a reporter for Fox News, shared alleged fresh information regarding the investigation via X. “Sheriff [Chris] Nanos responds to me in regards to the local Phoenix news report that cites an inside source who says investigators imagine the Guthrie case was a burglary gone bad and that Nancy Guthrie remains to be alive,” Finn wrote before reiterating the unverified nature of the report. “Didn’t come from us. No idea and regardless that that’s one among many possibilities we’d never speculate such a thing. We are going to let the evidence take us to motive.”
Pima County Sheriff Nanos told the Recent York Times on Friday, February 13, that the seek for Nancy has engaged about 400 people in total. He also noted that a timeline for the potential secure retrieval of Nancy stays unclear. “Possibly it’s an hour from now,” Nanos detailed. “Possibly it’s weeks or months or years from now. But we won’t quit. We’re going to seek out Nancy. We’re going to seek out this guy.”
News of Nancy’s disappearance broke on February 1 after a member of the family reported her missing and called 911 in consequence.
The search has seen multiple SWAT, forensic officers and other law enforcement departments comb Nancy’s neighborhood within the Catalina Foothills and surrounding areas, per reporting by CNN and NewsNation.



