Ring camera footage captures car speeding near Nancy Guthrie's home minutes after abduction

 February 28, 2026
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New doorbell camera footage from a home roughly 2.5 miles from Nancy Guthrie's Tucson, Arizona, residence shows a car speeding down a back road at approximately 2:36 a.m. on Feb. 1, just minutes after authorities believe the 84-year-old mother of journalist Savannah Guthrie was taken from her home.

The footage was released not by investigators, but by neighbors who say authorities never came to their door. Nancy Guthrie has now been missing for nearly a month.

The Pima County Sheriff's Office and the FBI are aware of the newly released Ring camera footage, but neither agency has shared whether it constitutes a clue in the case. The timeline that night is chilling in its precision.

A timeline measured in minutes

Nancy was last seen alive by family after having dinner with her daughter, Annie Guthrie, on the evening of Jan. 31. What followed in the early morning hours of Feb. 1 unfolded with disturbing speed:

  • 1:47 a.m.: Nancy's doorbell camera was disconnected.
  • 2:12 a.m.: A person was detected on the camera.
  • 2:28 a.m.: Nancy's pacemaker was disconnected from the pacemaker app on her cellphone.
  • 2:36 a.m.: The newly released Ring footage, recorded at a neighbor's home roughly a seven-minute drive away, captures a car speeding down a back road.

That final timestamp lands roughly eight minutes after Nancy's pacemaker last synced with her iPhone. Surveillance footage and images previously released by the FBI and the sheriff's office from Nancy's Nest doorbell camera show an armed, masked intruder walking up to the front door of her home. Sheriff Chris Nanos said in a post on X that the person in the video appeared to have tampered with the front door camera.

Nancy was reported missing the next day after she failed to attend a virtual church service with a group of neighbors.

Neighbors doing the work investigators didn't

The footage was released by neighbors Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas, who live about 2.5 miles from Nancy's home. What makes their involvement notable is the reason they had to act on their own: they said authorities had not canvassed their neighborhood in the past 25 days, People reports.

Twenty-five days. An 84-year-old woman is taken from her home by an armed intruder in the middle of the night, and the people living a seven-minute drive away on a back road say no one from law enforcement knocked on their door to ask for footage.

The sheriff's office had previously requested Ring camera footage from homes within a two-mile radius dating back to Jan. 1, with particular focus on Jan. 11 between 9 p.m. and midnight, and Jan. 31 between 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. The Stratigouleas home sits just outside that radius, at roughly 2.5 miles. Whether that half-mile gap explains the oversight or exposes it is a question the Pima County Sheriff's Office will eventually have to answer.

This is the kind of case where the margin between a lead and a dead end can be measured in blocks. Arbitrary geographic cutoffs in a kidnapping investigation involving a back road and a speeding car at 2:36 in the morning deserve scrutiny.

A family's desperate plea

Earlier this week, Savannah Guthrie released an emotional video announcing that the Guthrie family is offering up to a $1 million reward for any information leading to Nancy's recovery. The family has donated $500,000 toward that effort. The FBI's standing reward of $100,000 remains active.

A million-dollar reward from a family. A hundred-thousand-dollar reward from the federal government. And still, nearly a month later, the public knows more about what a neighbor's Ring camera captured than what investigators have pieced together.

What this case demands

There is a pattern in cases like this that should concern every American, particularly those in communities where law enforcement resources are stretched thin and investigative urgency seems to fade with each passing week. When neighbors are the ones surfacing potential evidence because no one from the sheriff's office drove the extra half mile, something has gone wrong at a basic operational level.

The facts here are still developing. The Pima County Sheriff's Office and the FBI may well be pursuing leads the public doesn't know about. That's how investigations work. But the Stratigouleas family's account of 25 days without contact from investigators is the kind of detail that erodes public confidence, and it deserves a direct answer from Sheriff Nanos.

An armed intruder walked up to an 84-year-old woman's door in the middle of the night, disabled her camera, and took her. Nearly a month later, the best new lead came from neighbors who checked their own footage. Nancy Guthrie is still missing.

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