A founding member of the NYPD’s K-9 team shares an emergency tip for searchers Nancy Guthrie”, said: “Look up, not down. Michael Gould, now chairman of the Houndstown charity, said those who searched on foot made a big mistake by concentrating on the ground rather than searching high places where clues might be hidden.

Fox True Crime shared Gould’s video on X. Check it out here: https://x.com/FoxTrueCrime/status/2069472479194800490?s=20
“I’m standing in the foothills of the Arizona desert and it’s a pleasant 110 degrees. I’m about 10 miles south of Tucson, between Nogales and Tucson,” Gould said in the video. “Tucson is obviously where Nancy Guthrie went missing. I tell you, finding a body here is as easy as finding a needle in a haystack. And that’s going to continue as long as I can see it.”
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“One tip I would give to rescuers, if they all want to get close to a body or remains, look up, not down, and look for birds, look for vultures, look for predatory birds that are looking for food. So if they’re circling around, that would be a good place to start. But if you’re just trying to cover the area, you’re going to need, it’s impossible,” he continued.
Gould concluded: “You either need clues, informants, or follow the birds. They will at least lead you to animal carcasses, but it could also be human remains, who knows. But it’s not an easy task.”
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It was revealed that a note sent to local news outlets in February about Nancy’s disappearance said she died shortly after her abduction. Investigators believe the note, as well as another earlier one demanding millions of dollars in ransom, were legitimate communications from the 84-year-old’s abductor, CNN reported.
“The second note said, basically, it wasn’t meant to be that way, but something happened during the kidnapping and Nancy Guthrie died,” John Miller, CNN’s chief law enforcement and intelligence analyst, told “AC360” Monday night.
“What makes this note important is that it comes from the same electronic source as the first ransom-demanding note,” he further said, adding that the second note “had a very different tone than the note from the week before.”
Meanwhile, a search group in Mexico revealed they had discovered dozens of unmarked graves after receiving anonymous tips about the incident. Nancy Guthrie case. Latest searches found no evidence of this Savannah Guthrie’s The missing mother, but the findings underscore the ongoing search near the U.S.-Mexico border.
Recently, the volunteer search group Buscando Corazones Nogales conducted a new search in the area near Nogales, Sonora, after receiving information related to Nancy’s disappearance, the Sunday Guardian reported. Search teams examined multiple locations following anonymous tips that suggested Nancy was believed to have been abducted from her home in Tucson and that she may be buried in a remote area south of the U.S.-Mexico border.
However, volunteers found no evidence of Nancy’s “grave” or her whereabouts.



