The mystery surrounding Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance just took another heartbreaking turn.
More than 100 days after Savannah Guthrie’s mother seemingly vanished without a trace from her Arizona home, experts now believe authorities have significantly reduced the number of resources dedicated to the case — and honestly, it is sounding more and more troubling by the day.
Related: Bone Discovered Near Missing Nancy Guthrie’s Home — Here’s What Police Know
Of course, investigators insist the case remains active. And local sheriff Chris Nanos (pictured above, inset) has even insisted that they are supposedly making progress on solving it, despite some pretty significant social media skepticism about that.
But sadly, former federal agents are painting a grim picture about what typically happens behind the scenes once a missing persons case slips out of the daily headlines, as in this situation. And according to retired FBI agent Jason Pack, for one, that shift has absolutely happened here.
Pack told Page Six about it on Monday:
“They have definitely scaled back resources in this continuing phase. That happens in every case. Add resources at the front end to make sure they can cover what needs to be covered.”
Oof. That is hard to hear.
Pack explained the investigation likely started with hundreds of law enforcement officers and agents working leads around the clock, but now the operation has likely narrowed down to only a small fraction of that manpower. Sadly, he says that is standard procedure once the frenzy of early tips begins to dry up:
“Lots of leads initially with the tip line… as it falls out of the news cycle, fewer tips come.”
And that may be exactly the problem investigators are facing right now.
As Perezcious readers know, Nancy was reported missing back on February 1 after she failed to appear for a virtual church service. The last confirmed sighting of her was the night before, when relatives dropped her off at home after dinner. Then, just over a week later, authorities released chilling surveillance footage showing a masked individual breaking into her house. Ever since then, the case has been filled with unsettling questions and very few concrete answers.
Former CIA officer and FBI special agent Tracy Walder believes investigators have now mentally shifted the case from a rescue mission to something much darker. He told Page Six about his theories regarding the current status of the case being a recovery operation, rather than a rescue:
“The investigation is not a rescue investigation. If it’s a rescue … then you are going to have more resources thrown at that because you have a living human that can potentially be recovered. At this point, they look at it as a recovery and investigating a crime. There is not a sense of urgency. There is not a risk to the public. This was specifically targeted towards her. If they thought there was a risk to the public, there would be more urgency.”
That statement alone — and using the word “recovery” with all its clear implications” — is enough to send chills down your spine.
Walder also admitted she is not shocked that Nancy has not yet been located, especially because whoever may have abducted her allegedly had a massive head start before authorities even realized she was gone. According to the former agent, that window of time can completely alter the trajectory of an investigation.
Related: Wait, Why Haven’t We Heard 911 Calls In Nancy Guthrie’s Case Yet?!
Adding to the frustration, too, is the apparent lack of evidence. In April, reports surfaced that a hair sample connected to the case had been submitted for DNA analysis, but there still does not appear to be any public breakthrough connected to it. About that, Walder said:
“In this case, we have the hair clipping that has been sent off. … I would like to think we would have a result by now. I think the fact there is zero digital evidence. The fact that there is no camera along the highway or road that caught a vehicle or a vehicle’s license plate. … In this case, it seems like there is nothing. … I think that’s the piece that’s troubling.”
Seriously, how is there seemingly no trace? No plate number? No camera footage? In 2026? It is all just genuinely baffling…
For their part, the Pima County Sheriff’s Office insists they are still aggressively pursuing answers and coordinating with the FBI as forensic testing continues nationwide. They told Page Six in a statement:
“The Pima County Sheriff’s Department remains fully committed to the investigation into Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance. This is an active and ongoing investigation, and we continue to work closely with our partners at the FBI. DNA and video analysis are underway, supported by laboratories across the country. Advances in technology are aiding investigative efforts, and tips continue to be received and reviewed.”
And, to that end, Walder actually praised investigators for continuing to chase every possible lead. She said:
“I think that they’re doing what they’re supposed to be doing in my opinion. I think they are just exhausting all options.”
She believes the next major step should involve genealogical DNA sequencing along with an extensive review of vehicles entering and leaving Nancy’s neighborhood around the time she vanished.
Still, despite the grim reality of the situation, Walder says she has not entirely lost hope:
“I do [think she’ll be recovered]. I don’t know it will happen overnight. I would like to think it will happen. I will be optimistic.”
And in the end, Pack says solving this mystery may come down to one crucial break:
“It only takes one tip. Someone knows the person in the video. Someone knows what happened.”
Seriously.
But that really is the haunting part of all of this, isn’t it? Somebody out there may already know exactly what happened to Nancy Guthrie. The question is whether they will finally come forward…



