The latest turn in the Nancy Guthrie investigation doesn’t come with a dramatic arrest or a named suspect—it comes with something quieter, more modern, and strangely unsettling: video. A routine convenience store camera. A “vehicle of interest” that may or may not matter. And investigators moving with the kind of urgency that suggests they can’t afford to ignore any thread, even the thinnest one.
A Case That Moves in Fragments, Not Answers
There are investigations that advance like a straight line: suspect identified, motive explored, evidence revealed. Then there are investigations like this—fragmented, tense, and publicly unresolved—where the outside world learns the case in pieces: a tip, a tow, a brief official statement, a neighbor’s memory, a camera angle that might matter.
That’s the atmosphere surrounding the search for Nancy Guthrie in Arizona, where law enforcement has now obtained surveillance footage from a Circle K in Tucson after receiving a tip about a “vehicle of interest.” The development, reported widely on February 7, 2026, adds another layer to a disappearance that authorities have treated as a possible kidnapping or abduction from the start.
Nancy Guthrie, 84, mother of NBC’s Today show co-anchor Savannah Guthrie, was last seen on the evening of January 31, 2026. She had dinner and played games at the home of her daughter Anne and son-in-law Tommaso Cioni, who dropped her off at her residence in the Catalina Foothills area north of Tucson around 9:48 p.m. A roughly 15-minute drive separates the drop-off location from the Circle K on Oracle Road where the footage was captured.
She failed to appear at church the next day, February 1, prompting family to report her missing around noon. Pima County Sheriff’s Department investigators arrived to find signs of disturbance: blood on or near her door, her Ring doorbell camera disconnected or removed (possibly ripped off in the dead of night), and indications she was taken against her will around 2:30 a.m. Nancy, who uses a pacemaker, requires daily heart medication, and has mobility issues, is considered a vulnerable adult—making time a critical factor in the search.
The FBI’s Phoenix Field Office joined the investigation early, classifying it as a kidnapping case and offering a reward of up to $50,000 for information leading to her recovery or the arrest and conviction of those involved. No suspects or persons of interest have been publicly named, and authorities emphasize that leads remain under active review.
The Circle K Lead: A Glimpse Through Surveillance
On Friday, February 7—six days into the search—law enforcement visited a Circle K convenience store on Oracle Road following a tip that a “vehicle of interest” may have been captured on its cameras. A Circle K spokesperson confirmed to multiple outlets, including NBC News and the Daily Mail, that officers were granted access to the store’s surveillance video.
Details about the vehicle remain limited and unconfirmed by officials. Some reports describe it resembling a grey 2021–2023 Nissan Rogue, with footage allegedly showing it pulling up to a pump around 10 p.m. and a woman exiting the passenger side—though these specifics are not officially verified and may stem from secondary accounts. The store is located near the home of Nancy’s daughter Anne, roughly half a mile away in some estimates, placing it in a plausible radius for activity shortly after the drop-off.
Investigators have stressed that it is standard procedure to collect video from nearby businesses and residences, and they have not confirmed whether this vehicle is directly linked to the disappearance. Still, the move reflects a broader effort to reconstruct movements in the hours surrounding Nancy’s last sighting.
This isn’t the only vehicle-related development. On the same day, authorities towed a blue Subaru SUV—believed to belong to Nancy—from her home’s garage to an impound lot. FBI agents were also seen removing a wired camera or device from the roof of her property, following a neighbor’s tip. Earlier neighborhood reports mentioned a suspicious large, unmarked white van parked in the area days before she vanished, adding to the mosaic of potential leads.
Ransom Notes, New Messages, and Family Pleas
The case has been complicated by purported ransom demands, including notes requesting millions in Bitcoin with deadlines that have passed or are looming. Authorities arrested a California man, Derrick Callella, after one note proved false, but they continue to evaluate subsequent messages—including a “new message” acknowledged by the Pima County Sheriff’s Department and FBI on February 6 and 7.
In response, the Guthrie family released a video plea on social media over the weekend (entering the eighth day of the search), with Savannah Guthrie and siblings stating, “We received your message… we will pay.” The carefully worded statement—likely vetted by FBI behavioral analysts—aims to open communication, encourage proof of life, and potentially enable tracking if payment occurs. “We want her home,” they emphasized, underscoring Nancy’s health vulnerabilities.
The Broader Search and Community Impact
Searches have focused on the Catalina Foothills neighborhood—known for its dark skies (due to stargazing protections) and secluded feel. Neighbors describe the area as “pitch-black” at night, with some security cameras “blinded” by low light, potentially allowing activity to go unnoticed. Drone footage and ground teams have combed the property and surroundings, but no breakthroughs have been publicly announced.
The emotional toll is evident. Family members, including Savannah Guthrie, have shared public appeals, while the community grapples with shock. “I don’t want to imagine what happened,” one resident told the BBC. Sheriff Chris Nanos has remained cautiously optimistic at times, noting “strong clues” but no firm answers.
As investigators review the Circle K footage—potentially analyzing plates, occupants, timestamps, or direction of travel—the case remains in that uneasy space between fragments and resolution. Every piece of video, every towed vehicle, every tip could be the turning point—or another dead end. For now, the search continues, driven by urgency for an 84-year-old woman who needs her medication and the desperate hope of a family waiting for her safe return.