Pima CountySheriff Chris Nanosmoved on Friday to shut down swirling online rumours in theNancy Guthriekidnapping case, telling reporters he had not detained any new person of interest in Tucson and dismissing talk of a late‑night arrest with a single word: 'Nope.'
A flurry of speculative reports claimed a breakthrough in the search for 84-year-old Nancy, the mother ofTodayco-anchorSavannah Guthrie, who was reported missing from her Tucson-area home on 1 February. The case is already highly charged, with doorbell camera footage showing a masked man at the front door and an FBI laboratory quietly working through DNA and a hair sample. Against that backdrop, any hint of movement is seized upon, especially when it appears to come from high-profile true-crime commentators.
The latest round of excitement began when US broadcaster Nancy Grace teased a supposed 'bombshell' in the Nancy investigation on herCrime Storiespodcast. Citing unnamed reports, Grace told listeners that a man south of Tucson had been detained for questioning in connection with the kidnapping.
Details in that episode were thin. Grace did not identify her sources. On air,Crime Storiesinvestigative reporter Dave Mack went further, pointing to an apparently abrupt on-air change at NBC'sTodayas indirect evidence that Savannah had been pulled away to receive significant new information about her mother's case.
Mack noted that Hoda Kotb, Savannah's co-anchor, suddenly took over an interview with actor Anne Hathaway that Savannah had seemed set to lead. To some listeners, that moment was presented as a clue that something big was happening off camera.
By the following day, the narrative had begun to unravel. Michael Ruiz, an investigative reporter with Fox News Digital, said on X that he had put the rumours directly to Sheriff Nanos and received a blunt one-word response. 'Nope,' the sheriff replied when asked whether anyone had been detained overnight in relation to the disappearance, according to Ruiz.
Former FBI agent and NewsNation contributor Jennifer Coffindaffer backed that up, telling her followers on X that she had also spoken with Nanos. 'According to Sheriff Nanos, no one was detained last night in Nancy's case despite some people on social media reporting this,' she wrote.
In other words, the sheriff's office is adamant there has been no arrest, no fresh detention and no hidden 'bombshell' that investigators are keeping from the public. Unless officials confirm otherwise, everything about a detained male suspect remains unverified and should be treated with caution.
There has been genuine, documented movement in the Nancy investigation this week, just not the Hollywood-style twist some podcast listeners might prefer.
On Thursday, multiple outlets, including ABC News, reported that the FBI is analysing DNA recovered from Guthrie's home using what officials described as advanced technology. An FBI official confirmed to ABC that the bureau had also received a hair sample collected in February, adding a second potential forensic lead as agents attempt to trace the masked man seen on the doorbell recording.
Source: International Business Times UK