Nancy Guthrie live updates: FBI doubles reward as details revealed about man in video
This version of Live Updates Nancy Guthrie Savannah Search Rcna258861 - Breaking News | NBC News Clone was adapted by NBC News Clone to help readers digest key facts more efficiently.
The FBI said it is looking for a man who is 5'9" to 5'10" tall, with an average build, and who was wearing an Ozark Trail backpack on Nancy Guthrie's porch the night she disappeared.

What we know
- SUSPECT DETAILS: The FBI provided new details about the suspect seen in videos on the porch of Nancy Guthrie’s home the morning she disappeared. Authorities said they are looking for a male who is 5’9” to 5’10” tall, with an average build, and said he was wearing a black, 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack.
- REWARD INCREASED: The FBI has increased the reward for information leading to an arrest or conviction to $100,000. The agency says it has fielded more than 13,000 tips from the public since Feb. 1, when the mother “TODAY” co-anchor Savannah Guthrie disappeared from her home.
- ARIZONA SEARCH: The Pima County Sheriff’s Department says investigators combing the foothills around Guthrie’s neighborhood have recovered several items, including gloves that have been submitted for DNA testing.
- 'WE WILL NEVER GIVE UP HOPE': Savannah Guthrie shared home movie footage of her mother and their family on social media, writing: “Our lovely mom. We will never give up on her. Thank you for your prayers and hope.”
True crime devotees visit Guthrie's neighborhood as they await break in case
Darla Rodriguez drove nearly two hours from Phoenix to visit Nancy Guthrie's home today. The self-proclaimed true crime enthusiast said she has been glued to news coverage of the woman's disappearance.
"There's so much speculation about, you know, the why, and possible suspects," she said. "So it's just trying to peel back an onion, you know, with so many layers and possibilities."
Rodriquez said she has been a fan of "Today" co-host Savannah Guthrie since her 2019 interviews with Jeffrey Epstein survivors. She said she was struck by her unflinching look inside the story and her respect toward the victims. She wanted to offer that same respect to Guthrie.
"What's scary is thinking that you're just home ... in this beautiful neighborhood, and somebody comes in and just does this," she said. "That's unbelievable."
No gloves found in Guthrie's home, sheriff says
No gloves were found at Guthrie's residence, Sheriff Nanos told NBC News today. His comments clarify previous reports that a pair of gloves was found at the home.
The closest glove was found 2 miles from Guthrie's house, he said, adding that only one pair of gloves was found that close.
No news conferences expected today
The Pima County Sheriff's Department is not holding any news conferences today. The department said there will be a briefing called only if and when there are updates to share.
Ring doorbell cameras can save video for up to 180 days
While most Ring users have their footage saved for 30 days, those who own the products can set different durations of how long they want video to be stored — up to 180 days, the company’s founder told NBC News.
"It’s really up to the customer on how they’ve how they’ve set it up," Jamie Siminoff said, "But for sure, I would say we still are in the window of where we should have the data — that our customers should still have the video to be able to share if they do have it, especially in this case."
Although Ring cameras typically activate and record only when motion is detected, 24/7 recording is available, and users can adjust settings to always record.
Unfortunately, a lot of the homes near Guthrie's residence are far from the street and are obscured by shrubbery, Siminoff said, so collecting video data of cars on the road might be hard in this case.
Video evidence is crucial to this kind of investigation, Ring doorbell camera founder says
Video evidence, like from a doorbell camera, has become a crucial piece of investigations such as the one into Guthrie's disappearance, said Jamie Siminoff, the chief inventor and founder of Ring doorbell cameras.
"I just think we're seeing that video footage is the most important thing in solving these crimes," he said, also pointing to how footage helped locate the Brown University shooter.
Siminoff said that although Guthrie’s house had a Nest camera, Ring is relevant in this case because others in the neighborhood may have had Ring cameras.
Investigators have asked community members to submit any video relevant to the Guthrie case, including footage from doorbell cameras that may show vehicles in the area around the time she went missing.

People stop to look at flowers and notes yesterday at the entrance to Guthrie's home. Brandon Bell / Getty Images
Siminoff explained how that works. Local police departments can send community alerts to neighbors via the Ring app, prompting them to upload video footage.
There is also a Neighbors app that people in the neighborhood use as a social media platform to discuss community happenings as well as crime and safety. Siminoff said police have also put a similar request out on that app.
"We’re seeing our systems used pretty heavily for this, as we’ve seen it in other serious cases," he said.
In order to send Ring video to the police, those who get the alert can look through their footage, select relevant video clips, and upload them through the system. A digital audit trail makes it "super easy and efficient," Siminoff said.
Sheriff Nanos says his department is working with FBI to test evidence found at Guthrie's home
Sheriff Nanos told NBC News affiliate KVOA that "a number of gloves have been found in a large area around the house."
He said his office is working with the FBI to test the gloves and other evidence recovered from the residence for DNA. Details about the gloves, including how many, are not immediately clear.
Nanos reiterated that a Reuters report from last night, which implied the sheriff's department and the FBI were in disagreement over where to test the evidence, was false.
He explained that when evidence comes across his desk, he shares it with the FBI, which conducts analysis, and the FBI then shares those analyses with the sheriff's department. Nanos said similar procedures were underway with the purported ransom notes allegedly sent to news outlets over the past two weeks.
Nanos also said officials took cheek swabs from "different individuals we've talked to along the way," which means they have DNA samples from people investigators might be interested in. The identities of those people have not been released, and investigators have not identified any suspects or persons of interest.
Arizona neighbors remain on high alert
The Catalina Foothills community, where Guthrie lives, has been on edge for nearly two weeks as authorities search for the 84-year-old. And with the release this week of a chilling video from Guthrie’s porch, neighbors’ fears are being renewed, they said.
“Seeing that monster come onto the porch is, like, I mean, it’s horrible,” Nicollete Daly said. “My mom lives here in town. She lives alone — now I’m worried as heck about her.”
Daly is concerned for her own safety, too.
“I’m scared to be alone,” she said.
Man responsible for sending fake ransom note to be arraigned today
Derrick Callella, the man who has been arrested and charged with allegedly sending a fake ransom note to the Guthrie family, will be arraigned in a federal courthouse in Arizona today at 4 p.m. local time.
He is accused of allegedly texting a fake ransom note to the Guthrie family, demanding money in exchange for their missing mother.
Tucson community rallies around Guthrie family
As the search for Savannah Guthrie’s mother enters its 13th day, touching shows of support and messages are growing outside her home and throughout the Tucson, Arizona, community. Pops of yellow flowers and ribbons dot the desert neighborhood as a message of hope for the family.

Details about Guthrie doorbell camera suspect are a significant development in case
The FBI has a new description of a suspect seen in videos on the porch of Guthrie’s home the morning she disappeared, saying he is approximately 5'9" to 5'10" and carried an Ozark Trail hiker pack. The new details mark a significant development in this case.
The Ozark Trail brand is a private label brand exclusive to Walmart. Walmart did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This time yesterday, officials and the public were working to identify the person's backpack. Now that officials know, they can review recent purchases to identify who purchased that specific model in the Tucson area in the past few months.
If officials can match a purchase to an individual's name or obtain surveillance footage of the backpack purchaser, they can cross-reference those names against driver's licenses and other identifiers to identify potential suspects.
Officials have also asked residents of Guthrie's neighborhood for doorbell camera footage from January and the early days of February, seeking footage of suspicious vehicles, as it remains unclear how the person shown in surveillance images outside Guthrie's home got there.
Investigators may at this stage feel that the person or people responsible for taking Guthrie knew the neighborhood well and had been there before.
Sheriff denies reports of tension between local and federal authorities in Guthrie investigation
The FBI is releasing new identifying details about the man seen in the doorbell camera videos from Guthrie’s front door. It comes as the FBI has doubled the reward to $100,000 for any information that leads to the missing 84-year-old.
In a phone interview with NBC News affiliate KVOA, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos also denied a report from Reuters claiming he is blocking FBI access to key evidence in the ongoing investigation.
When asked about last night's report, Nanos said it is "not even close to the truth" that the two agencies are in disagreement over where the gloves and other evidence should be tested.

'We will never give up on her,' Savannah Guthrie says of search for mom
As the grueling search for her 84-year-old mother continues, "TODAY" co-anchor Savannah Guthrie shared home video of her family from her childhood.
“Our lovely mom. We will never give up on her. Thank you for your prayers and hope,” she wrote on her social media post.

Gloves recovered and sent out for analysis
Today marks the 13th day in the search for Guthrie. The biggest break in the case came earlier this week, when chilling video from her porch was recovered and showed a suspect approaching her home during the window when authorities say she was likely taken. A look at what happened yesterday:
- The FBI today provided a new description of the suspect seen in video on the porch of Guthrie’s home the morning she disappeared. Authorities are looking for a male, who is 5’9” to 5’10” tall, with an average build. He was wearing a black, 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack based on the video, the FBI said.
- Savannah Guthrie shared home movies on Instagram of herself, her siblings and her mother when they were younger. In her caption, she wrote: “Our lovely mom. We will never give up on her.”
- Gloves were recovered as evidence and are being sent out for analysis, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department said today. Pictures and videos released this week by the FBI showed a person wearing black gloves.
- Authorities expanded their call for video. Police sent an alert through the Neighbors App to users within a 2-mile radius of Guthrie’s home.
Investigators search for clues in Guthrie abduction
Law enforcement, who set up a tent covering Guthrie’s porch yesterday, put out another plea for video near her house, and said gloves and other evidence found near her home have been sent to be analyzed.

Internet-connected doorbells promise security but raise privacy alarms
The FBI’s publication of videos from Guthrie’s Google Nest doorbell camera has reinvigorated questions that have dogged Big Tech companies as they have become a larger part of people’s daily lives: How much data are these devices collecting? What happens to that data? Is it ever truly deleted?
FBI Director Kash Patel said Tuesday that the footage had been recovered thanks to the bureau’s work with private companies, coming after Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said the video was unavailable because Guthrie did not pay for a Nest subscription.
While the details are still unknown, Patel said in an interview with Fox News on Tuesday evening: “We were able to execute lawful searches and go to these private sector companies and expedite results, and then go into their systems and actually excavate material that people would think would normally be deleted and no one would look for.”
The capture of those videos was a relief, offering authorities and the public some information to use in hopes of finding Guthrie. But it also underscored how these systems can collect video even if people might not be aware that they are doing so, and that the modern systems that power these internet-connected devices can be harnessed by law enforcement — even when that data may not be available to the users themselves.
Reward in disappearance case grows to $100,000
When it released new identifying details about the suspect seen on Guthrie's porch video, the FBI also announced that the reward for information leading to an arrest or conviction in the case had increased to $100,000.
The FBI said it hopes the updated description of the suspect will help “concentrate” tips, saying it has received more than 13,000 tips from the public since Feb. 1.

An FBI billboard in California displaying a missing person alert for Nancy Guthrie. via NBC Los Angeles
FBI looking for a man who is 5'9" or 5'10" with Ozark Trail backpack
After a forensic analysis of doorbell camera video from Guthrie's home, the FBI said it had was looking for a male suspect 5’9” to 5’10” tall, with an average build.
He was wearing a black, 24-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack based on the video.