Nancy Guthrie Update: Savannah ‘Cannot Be at Peace’ as Family Issue Heartbreaking New Appeal
Nancy Guthrie’s family used a televised special in Tucson on Saturday 21 March to unveil never-before-seen photos of the missing mother and renew their plea for help, with daughter and Today show anchor Savannah Guthrie saying the family ‘cannot be at peace’ until Nancy is found.
Nancy Guthrie disappeared from her home in the Catalina Foothills area near Tucson, Arizona, after she was last seen on 31 January and officially reported missing on 1 February. Local police have been investigating her disappearance ever since, while her case has drawn national attention in the United States because of the involvement of her high-profile daughter, Savannah.
Authorities have not announced any major breakthrough and nothing has been confirmed about what happened to Nancy, so all information should be treated with caution.
TV Special Brings New Focus to Nancy Guthrie Case
The latest update came in the form of a half-hour special on local station News 4 Tucson titled Bring Her Home – The Disappearance of Nancy Guthrie. The programme revisited the timeline of Nancy’s abduction from her Catalina Foothills residence and explored the impact of the case on southern Arizona, where the story has become an uneasy fixture of everyday life.
During the broadcast, reporters recapped how Nancy vanished in the hours around 31 January. She was seen that day, but when relatives could not reach her, she was reported missing the following morning, 1 February.
Guthrie Family Pleads For Renewed Attention To Disappearance As No Detail Is Too Small To Share: We Cannot Grieve; We Can Only Ache And Wonder https://t.co/Rz77j129Wd #news
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Investigators have treated the case as an abduction and have appealed repeatedly for witnesses, CCTV footage and even minor pieces of information that could close the gaps in those crucial hours.
The special also noted that the disappearance of an unnamed Air Force general has drawn attention because of what were described as ‘chilling similarities’ to the Guthrie case. However, no formal link between the investigations has been made public, and police have not confirmed any connection.
What set Saturday’s broadcast apart was not just the reconstruction of events but its ending. As the programme drew to a close, the station aired previously unreleased home video clips and a rare photograph of Nancy Guthrie with her three children, Savannah, her sister Annie and their brother Camron.
At the conclusion of the Nancy Guthrie special, broadcast on an Arizona-based news station, previously unseen photographs of her with her children — daughters Savannah Guthrie, the Today Show star, and Annie Guthrie, along with her son Camron Guthrie — … https://t.co/wmiW6LGZtA pic.twitter.com/znot9yZnRp
— Irish Star US (@IrishStarUS) March 22, 2026
In one sequence, the children are seen playing and hugging their mother outdoors, a fragment of ordinary family life that now feels sharply distant. Then came a professionally shot black and white portrait, showing a younger Nancy with her three children smiling in her lap, taken when they were still in primary school.
It was a deliberate choice to put a human face, and a family history, back at the centre of what has become an increasingly baffling case file.
Family’s Heartbreaking New Appeal
Before the final images of Nancy Guthrie appeared on screen, the station’s anchor read a newly written statement from the Guthrie family. It was less a press release and more a direct appeal to the people of Tucson.
‘We continue to believe it is Tucsonans, and the greater southern Arizona community, that hold the key to finding resolution in this case,’ the statement said. ‘Someone knows something. It’s possible a member of this community has information that they do not even realise is significant.’
The family urged viewers to mentally rewind their lives around the central dates of the investigation. They highlighted three key windows, 31 January, the early morning of 1 February and the late evening of 11 January.
Detectives have previously focused on those periods as they try to piece together Nancy’s movements and any suspicious activity around her home. The statement continued with a more practical request aimed at anyone living in or passing through the area.
‘We desperately ask this community for renewed attention to our mom’s case please consult camera footage, journal notes, text messages, observations or conversations that in retrospect may hold significance. No detail is too small. It may be the key.’
Such pleas often surface in missing persons cases, but this one is amplified by a family with an unusually large platform. Savannah Guthrie, 54, has used her position on NBC’s Today show to speak directly to viewers about her mother’s disappearance, recording multiple video messages appealing for information and for her mother’s safe return.
US outlet Express US has reported on several of those appeals, in which Savannah mixes on-air professionalism with an obvious strain of personal anguish.
Her siblings, Annie and Camron, have also recorded video appeals, repeating the request that anyone who might have seen or heard something in late January or early February, no matter how minor, come forward.
In Saturday’s written statement, the family’s tone shifted from methodical to raw. ‘We miss our mom with every breath, and we cannot be at peace until she is home. We cannot grieve, we can only ache and wonder,’ they wrote.
The message closed with a line that emphasised the complicated limbo in which the family now lives. ‘Our focus is solely on finding her and bringing her home. We want to celebrate her beautiful and courageous life, but cannot do so until she is brought to a final place of rest. Thank you for continuing to pray without ceasing.’
Originally published on IBTimes UK