Major update in Savannah Guthrie mother’s kidnapping case after clothing found near Arizona home
A pajama top discovered near Nancy Guthrie’s Arizona home has sparked a major new development

A major development has emerged in the disappearance case of Savannah Guthrie’s mother, Nancy Guthrie, after investigators reportedly discovered clothing items on disturbed land roughly 30 minutes from her Arizona home.
According to search volunteers involved in the ongoing investigation, a pajama top and additional clothing were found near Highway 79 while teams searched the area connected to Nancy’s disappearance. Authorities were immediately contacted and later took possession of the items for further examination.
The discovery has drawn major attention because Nancy Guthrie was reportedly wearing pajamas when she was allegedly abducted from her home in Tucson’s Catalina Foothills area earlier this year.
During a previous public statement, Savannah emotionally described her mother being taken “in the dead of night” without shoes or medication.
However, officials have not confirmed whether the recovered clothing actually belonged to Nancy, and investigators have yet to announce any breakthrough identifying a suspect.
The 84-year-old disappeared on January 31, 2026, after spending time with her daughter Annie Guthrie and son-in-law Tommaso Cioni, who were reportedly the last known people to see her before she vanished.
Concern escalated after Nancy failed to appear at church the following day, prompting an intense investigation by the Pima County Sheriff’s Office.
Investigators later stated they believed Nancy had been abducted from her home against her will, citing surveillance footage that allegedly showed a masked individual near the property during the night she disappeared.
Despite months of searching and multiple theories circulating online, no arrests have been made in the case. The latest discovery has now renewed public attention and hope that investigators could finally uncover a crucial lead in one of the most closely followed missing-person cases of the year.



















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