Drama alert in the desert, and this one has all the makings of a not-at-all-ideal, headline-grabbing showdown…
FBI director Kash Patel is not holding back, blasting Arizona authorities over what he claims was a seriously mishandled investigation into the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of Today journalist Savannah Guthrie. And if you thought this case couldn’t get more intense, think again.
So, first, let’s rewind. Nancy vanished from her Tucson home way back on February 1, sparking immediate concern and a full-scale search effort. Early reports pointed to a possible abduction, and chilling doorbell camera footage later surfaced showing a masked man lurking outside her property. Naturally, the clock started ticking, because in cases like this, those first hours can mean everything.
Related: Wait, Why Haven’t We Heard 911 Calls In Nancy Guthrie’s Case Yet?!
Enter Patel, who now claims that the FBI he leads was essentially benched during the most critical window of the investigation. Speaking to journalist Sean Hannity this week, Patel said his team was blocked from assisting the Pima County Sheriff’s Department for four days. Four whole days!!! In a situation where every second counts, that’s not exactly a minor delay.
And then Kash said:
“When we were finally let in, Sean, look what we did.”
That’s Patel taking a not-so-subtle victory lap, pointing to the FBI’s role in obtaining the now-infamous surveillance footage. He’s also raising eyebrows about what might have been missed had his agency been involved from the start. More footage? More clues? We may never know.
But wait, there’s more finger-pointing. Patel also criticized local authorities for sending potential DNA evidence to a lab in Florida instead of utilizing the FBI’s elite facility in Quantico, Virginia. Still, he stopped short of outright condemning the decision, adding a diplomatic twist:
“It’s a state and local matter, so it’s their call where to send the DNA. They have jurisdiction, so it’s their call.”
Translation: not my circus, not my monkeys… but… maybe it should have been?
Meanwhile, frustration is boiling over as the case remains unsolved. Hannity voiced what many are thinking about the case’s unlikely result, and Patel didn’t exactly disagree, offering a more measured response about what comes next.
About that, Patel also said:
“What we can do is continue to offer support.”
As of now, the Pima County Sheriff’s Department and its leader Chris Nanos have collectively stayed silent about this part of the growing controversy, leaving the public with more questions than answers. And with the spotlight intensifying, this investigation is quickly becoming as much about inter-agency tension as it is about finding Nancy.
You can see Patel’s whole discussion about that and lots, lots more (below):
Well then.
At least one thing is clear here thus far: the apparent jurisdictional drama unfolding behind the scenes might be just as gripping as the mystery itself.
And that’s never a good thing…
[Image via Fox News/YouTube/CNN/YouTube/Savannah Guthrie/Instagram]



