Three months after missing Nancy Guthrie From her home in Tucson, Arizona, two of the FBI’s most experienced criminal profilers offer their insights into the case and their hypotheses about who is responsible for kidnapping the 84-year-old Today anchor mother Savannah Guthrie Quite stunning.

“Tracking Scenario”
Retired FBI supervisory agent Jim Clemente, a former member of the FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit, and retired profiler Jim Fitzgerald both agree, kidnapping Link to Savannah And the main target might not be Nancy at all.
“It has to do with the stalking type scene in Savannah,” Fitzgerald told NewsNation.
He said investigators must scrutinize all forms of correspondence Savannah Guthrie received over the past five years, including social media messages and subsequent emails. Nancy Guthrie’s Appearing on the Today show.
The hypothesis is that people who were unable to contact the TV personality turned their attention directly to her mother.
Nancy Guthrie Case: Wasn’t the Ransom Demand Real?
Fitzgerald also questioned the significance of subsequent ransom demands. Nancy Guthrie’s disappeared, expressing his belief that they were not real. Fitzgerald did not suggest the kidnappings were for financial reasons, but described the demands as opportunistic – a second aspect of the crime he believed was driven by psychological factors.
“The crime appears to be motivated by psychological needs rather than financial gain,” he said.
Current status of the Nancy Guthrie Detector
Guthrie’s disappearance remains unsolved. Investigators continue to sift through more than 30,000 tips, and a source familiar with the investigation told NewsNation that progress has slowed and there are limited leads to act on. Nancy Guthrie was last seen in her Catalina Feb. 1 in the Tucson Foothills area. Authorities suspected she had been kidnapped because drops of blood were found on her front porch and surveillance video captured a masked figure near her door the night she disappeared.


