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When a beloved family member goes missing, the pain is immeasurable. For NBC Today anchor Savannah Guthrie, that unimaginable reality became her life on the morning of January 31, 2026, when her 84-year-old mother, Nancy Guthrie, disappeared from her home in the Tucson area of Arizona. What followed was not only a deeply distressing family crisis, but also a nationwide search effort, an active multi-agency investigation, and — troublingly — a wave of false information that spread rapidly across social media, adding confusion and heartache to an already devastating situation.
Nancy Guthrie, a woman described by those who know her as warm, independent, and sharp-minded well into her eighties, was last seen at her Tucson-area residence. Investigators believe she was taken from her home during the night. The circumstances of her disappearance were not consistent with a voluntary departure — she did not pack belongings, did not reach out to family members, and showed no signs of planning to leave. Most significantly, evidence discovered at the scene, including bloodstains that were later confirmed through DNA testing to match Nancy Guthrie, led law enforcement officials to treat the case as a possible abduction from the very beginning.
A Complete Timeline of Nancy Guthrie’s Disappearance and Case Update
One of the most significant pieces of evidence released to the public came in the form of doorbell camera footage captured near Nancy Guthrie’s home on the night she vanished. The footage showed a masked individual carrying a backpack in the vicinity of her residence. Law enforcement released this footage in hopes that someone in the public might recognize the figure, the clothing, or any other identifying details. As of the most recent confirmed reporting, that individual has not been publicly identified or apprehended.
Authorities have stressed throughout the investigation that tips from the public are crucial. A dedicated tip line was established, and law enforcement officials made regular public appeals for anyone with information — no matter how small or seemingly insignificant — to come forward. The response from the public has been substantial, with people across the country reaching out after seeing news coverage of the case. Each tip is followed up on by investigators working the case around the clock.
There is, however, another dimension to this story — one that speaks not to the investigation itself, but to the troubling ecosystem of misinformation that has grown up around it.
Shortly after Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance became national news, a man named Derrick Callella, 42 years old and a resident of California, was charged by federal prosecutors with a disturbing and callous act. According to authorities, Callella allegedly sent fake ransom text messages to members of the Guthrie family while the investigation was actively underway. The messages reportedly included false demands for payment in bitcoin, fabricated to look as though they came from someone connected to Nancy’s disappearance. Investigators were clear on an important point: Callella is not believed to have any connection to Nancy Guthrie’s actual disappearance. He is not a suspect in the abduction. He is accused solely of exploiting a family’s desperate fear during the worst moments of their lives for reasons that remain deeply troubling. Callella was released under pretrial supervision conditions while his case proceeds through the legal system.
In the weeks following Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance, a series of fabricated claims began circulating on social media platforms and on various unverified websites. These posts claimed, falsely, that the case had been “closed.” They claimed, falsely, that Nancy Guthrie had been found dead. They named specific individuals — people not connected to any official investigation — as having been arrested for her murder. Some versions of these posts invented elaborate backstories involving family conflicts, inheritance disputes, and betrayal. None of these claims were supported by any credible reporting, any official statement, or any verified source of any kind.
Yet these posts were shared thousands of times. They appeared in feeds alongside legitimate news coverage. People who cared about the case and were following it closely sometimes encountered these false claims before they encountered the truth, leading to genuine confusion about what had actually happened. Family friends, community members, and even journalists had to spend time and energy debunking fabrications rather than focusing on what mattered most — finding Nancy Guthrie.
Savannah Guthrie’s Mom’s Friend from Church Reported Her Missing to Children
There is real harm in this. Beyond the confusion it causes among the general public, misinformation in active missing persons cases can interfere with investigations. It can cause investigators to field calls about false leads. It can cause witnesses with real information to hesitate, unsure of what is true. And most painfully, it causes additional suffering for the families at the center of these cases — families who are already enduring something nearly unbearable, and who must now also navigate a landscape of lies being told about their loved ones.
Anyone with information that might be relevant to the case is urged to contact the Pima County Sheriff’s Office or the FBI tip line. Even details that may seem minor — an unfamiliar vehicle, an unusual interaction, anything that seemed out of place in the days before or after January 31 — could prove meaningful to investigators working to bring Nancy home.
Nancy Guthrie is a real person. She is someone’s mother. She is someone’s grandmother, someone’s friend, someone’s neighbor. She deserves to have her story told accurately, with care and with honesty. And she deserves for the people who care about her case to stay focused on what is real — because the truth, as uncomfortable and uncertain as it sometimes is, is the only foundation on which real help can be built.
The search continues. The truth matters. And Nancy Guthrie is still missing.
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