White tent is erected outside Nancy Guthrie’s home 11 days after her abduction

A white forensic tent has been set up outside Nancy Guthrie’s home, where just 11 days ago a creepy figure wearing a ski mask and thick gloves was seen approaching her home.
Guthrie, 84, was kidnapped from his $1 million Tucson, Arizona, home in the early hours of February 1.
A large tent now blocks the entrance to Guthrie’s home and the front porch, where investigators found blood matching his DNA.
It is unclear why the tent was erected or what evidence was identified. But forensic tents are typically erected when investigators want to conceal a body, weapon or other critical evidence.
Minutes after news broke about the tent breaking, Today Show host Savannah Guthrie posted a heartbreaking video tribute to her mother.
“Our beloved mother,” Savannah wrote. ‘We will never give up on him. Thank you for your prayers and hope.’
Coming after the FBI Agents searched the surrounding rugged brushland inch by inch. Wednesday at home.
Investigators were inundated with thousands of clues after releasing doorbell camera footage showing the suspect approaching Guthrie’s home, only to realize the camera was recording him and tearing him apart.
Investigators set up a white tent outside Nancy Guthrie’s home in Tucson, Arizona.
Guthrie was abducted in the early hours of February 1 along with her daughter, Today Show host Savannah Guthrie.
A creepy masked figure was seen outside Nancy Guthrie’s home the night she disappeared
Hundreds of detectives and agents were assigned to the investigation to find Guthrie.
By Tuesday, authorities appeared to have made little progress in determining what happened to Nancy Guthrie or finding out who was responsible.
surveillance photosThe first significant break in the case was when a masked man on Guthrie’s porch tried to hide the doorbell camera.
But the footage doesn’t show what happened to him or help determine whether he’s still alive.
FBI Director Kash Patel said investigators spent days trying to find missing, corrupted or inaccessible footage.
Two inspectors emerged from daughter Annie Guthrie’s home Wednesday with a paper shopping sack and a white trash bag.
Someone still wearing blue protective gloves also picked up a pile of mail from a roadside mailbox. They walked away without speaking to reporters.
Annie and her husband, Tommaso Cioni, who lived a few miles away from Guthrie, were among the last people to see the 84-year-old woman before she was abducted.
A large tent now blocks the entrance to Guthrie’s home and the front porch, where investigators found blood matching his DNA. It is unclear why the tent was erected or what evidence was identified.
Law enforcement officers check vegetation around Nancy Guthrie’s home in Tucson, Arizona, on Wednesday, February 11, 2026
Savannah and her siblings, Camron and Annie, in a video they shared online asking for help.
Local media in Tucson also reported Wednesday that people with Ring doorbell cameras in the area received an alert that investigators were requesting footage between 9 p.m. and midnight on Jan. 11 in the Guthrie case.
This was almost three weeks before Guthrie went missing.
According to the Ring website, Ring allows local public safety agencies to send requests to users in the community that appear publicly in the ‘Neighbors’ stream. Users in a specified area receive a notification.
A pair of black gloves were found near Guthrie’s home, resembling those worn by her kidnapper in chilling doorbell camera footage.
The item was found about a mile and a half from his home by detectives on Wednesday, the 10th day of their search for the 84-year-old man.
The Daily Mail reported that a single glove found in a small bush was bagged, taken by authorities and sent for DNA analysis.
Authorities did not give a definitive answer as to who it belonged to.
Savannah, Annie, and their brother Camron expressed willingness to pay a ransom.
Deadlines have passed, it is unknown whether the ransom notes demanding money are genuine and whether the family had any contact with Guthrie’s kidnapper.
Sheriff Chris Nanos described Nancy Guthrie as mentally healthy but with limited mobility. He takes numerous medications, leading to immediate concerns about his health without them.
This is breaking news. Check back for updates.




