In one of the more eerie developments in the 18-day and counting search for Nancy Guthrie, Fox News Digitalhas learnedthat an internet user searched for her address before she disappeared.
Google Trends data show a single search for Guthrie’s address in the Catalina Foothills between June 21 and 28, 2025, originating in Arizona. The address was not searched again until January 11, 2026. Guthrie disappeared on January 31.
The date of the search is particularly interesting. Police previously asked Nancy's neighbors connected to the Neighbor App by Ring to share video footage from "January 11 between 9 p.m. and midnight" without an explanation.
Whether the two references to that date are connected remains unclear.
Fox News Digital also learned that someone in Tucson searched for "Savannah Guthrie salary" between December 13 and 20, 2025.
It is certainly unusual for a user to search for the address of a talk show host’s mother and for her to go missing weeks later. Likewise, the sole user who searched for Savannah’s address resided in Tucson, where Nancy lived and was abducted. The timing of both searches is also notable.
We caution sleuths, however, that while these searches are suspicious, several other oddities have emerged during the investigation without yielding results.
In this photo illustration, Nancy Guthrie's alleged kidnapper is seen on FBI Director Kash Patel's X account on a cellular phone February 10, 2026, in Tucson, Arizona. (Photo by Brandon Bell/Getty Images)
At this point, the case will likely only be solved through Investigative Genetic Genealogy (IGG). IGG is a sophisticated forensic method that identifies unknown DNA by building family trees and tracing relatives to identify suspects.
Genetic genealogy played a central role in the arrest and conviction of Bryan Kohberger and Joseph James DeAngelo, the "Golden State Killer."
Source: The Latest & Most Breaking News With OutKick