NEW DEVELOPMENT: A mysterious man carrying two backpacks was caught on surveillance video just five miles from Nancy Guthrie’s home — only minutes after her security camera was reportedly tampered with.n
A fresh piece of surveillance video has intensified the search for 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie, missing since the early hours of February 1, 2026, from her Tucson, Arizona home. The footage, captured on a Ring doorbell camera approximately five miles away, shows a man wearing one backpack and carrying another as he attempts to open a locked gate at 1:52 a.m. — a critical window that aligns eerily with the timeline of events at Guthrie’s residence.
Investigators recovered doorbell camera data from Guthrie’s Nest system showing a masked individual tampering with the device around 1:47 a.m., disabling it after approaching the front porch. The person, now described by the FBI as male, approximately 5’9″ to 5’10” tall with an average build, wore a black 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack with visible reflective straps. He was also seen with a holstered handgun positioned unusually at the front of his waistband. After obscuring the lens with foliage and a gloved hand, the system later detected movement again around 2:12 a.m.
The new Ring video, obtained and verified by outlets including TMZ and discussed on programs like Megyn Kelly’s show with former FBI agents, places a similar figure in the vicinity during that narrow timeframe. The man in the clip wears a gray hooded jacket and jeans, carries one backpack on his back and holds another in hand — the held backpack featuring reflective elements strikingly comparable to the Ozark Trail model identified in the primary footage. He tugs at the gate unsuccessfully before moving out of frame, suggesting possible reconnaissance, escape, or disposal activity post-abduction.
FBI analysts are actively comparing the two videos for gait, build, clothing details, and backpack matches. The proximity — just five miles in a sprawling desert suburb — combined with the precise timing (five minutes after camera disconnection, 20 minutes before the secondary detection) has elevated this lead to priority status. Former agents consulted on air noted that dual backpacks could indicate preparation for carrying tools, restraints, or even evidence removal, especially given Nancy’s vulnerability: her pacemaker signal dropped around 2:30 a.m., her Apple Watch and phone were left behind, and blood confirmed as hers via DNA was found on the porch.
The discovery prompted renewed calls for public assistance. Authorities urged residents within a widening radius to submit any security footage from January 31 through February 1, focusing on pre-abduction scouting. The FBI Phoenix field office posted updated suspect details on social media, including clear images of the Ozark Trail backpack — a common Walmart-sold model — to jog memories of purchases, sightings, or associations. The reward for information leading to Nancy’s safe return and/or arrests jumped to $100,000, reflecting the case’s urgency as days without proof of life mount.
Family anguish remains palpable. Savannah Guthrie, absent from “Today” to aid the Arizona effort, continues sharing emotional tributes — old videos of Nancy with grandchildren, captions pleading for her return. Husband Michael Feldman reposted suspect images with a raw appeal: “Someone out there may recognize this person. Please help us. Bring her home.” Siblings Annie and Camron have begged directly for contact from any abductor(s), stressing Nancy’s medical fragility and willingness to negotiate.
Ransom demands persist as a complicating factor. Multiple Bitcoin requests surfaced, one potentially credible due to private details, while fakes triggered fraud arrests. No verified communication or life signs have followed, fueling theories of financial motive tied to the family’s prominence or opportunistic crime.
The Rio Rico raid earlier in the week — detaining and releasing a man after a property search — proved fruitless, redirecting focus to video evidence. Desert searches continue, with agents combing foothills and roadways; the gloves find near the home underwent forensic review, though no public breakthroughs emerged from it yet.
Experts emphasize the videos’ power in crowdsourcing identification. Even masked, suspects leave traces: posture, stride, item specifics like backpack brands, or behavioral quirks. The amateurish camera tampering and odd holster placement suggest possible inexperience, which could accelerate tips from retail records, acquaintances, or witnesses.
As the investigation enters its critical second week-plus, this new footage represents the most promising development since the initial doorbell release. It narrows the window, multiplies the backpack identifiers, and raises the chilling possibility of multiple individuals or a deliberate getaway plan. With Nancy’s health needs pressing — daily medications, heart conditions, mobility limits — every hour counts.
The public remains gripped, sharing clips and theories across platforms. Whether this mystery man with two backpacks is the primary suspect fleeing, an accomplice, or an unrelated coincidence, the alignment is too close to ignore. Authorities hope one viewer recognizes the gait, the gear, or the timing — turning grainy night vision into the lead that brings Nancy Guthrie safely home.

A fresh piece of surveillance video has intensified the search for 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie, missing since the early hours of February 1, 2026, from her Tucson, Arizona home. The footage, captured on a Ring doorbell camera approximately five miles away, shows a man wearing one backpack and carrying another as he attempts to open a locked gate at 1:52 a.m. — a critical window that aligns eerily with the timeline of events at Guthrie’s residence.
Investigators recovered doorbell camera data from Guthrie’s Nest system showing a masked individual tampering with the device around 1:47 a.m., disabling it after approaching the front porch. The person, now described by the FBI as male, approximately 5’9″ to 5’10” tall with an average build, wore a black 25-liter Ozark Trail Hiker Pack backpack with visible reflective straps. He was also seen with a holstered handgun positioned unusually at the front of his waistband. After obscuring the lens with foliage and a gloved hand, the system later detected movement again around 2:12 a.m.
The new Ring video, obtained and verified by outlets including TMZ and discussed on programs like Megyn Kelly’s show with former FBI agents, places a similar figure in the vicinity during that narrow timeframe. The man in the clip wears a gray hooded jacket and jeans, carries one backpack on his back and holds another in hand — the held backpack featuring reflective elements strikingly comparable to the Ozark Trail model identified in the primary footage. He tugs at the gate unsuccessfully before moving out of frame, suggesting possible reconnaissance, escape, or disposal activity post-abduction.
FBI analysts are actively comparing the two videos for gait, build, clothing details, and backpack matches. The proximity — just five miles in a sprawling desert suburb — combined with the precise timing (five minutes after camera disconnection, 20 minutes before the secondary detection) has elevated this lead to priority status. Former agents consulted on air noted that dual backpacks could indicate preparation for carrying tools, restraints, or even evidence removal, especially given Nancy’s vulnerability: her pacemaker signal dropped around 2:30 a.m., her Apple Watch and phone were left behind, and blood confirmed as hers via DNA was found on the porch.
The discovery prompted renewed calls for public assistance. Authorities urged residents within a widening radius to submit any security footage from January 31 through February 1, focusing on pre-abduction scouting. The FBI Phoenix field office posted updated suspect details on social media, including clear images of the Ozark Trail backpack — a common Walmart-sold model — to jog memories of purchases, sightings, or associations. The reward for information leading to Nancy’s safe return and/or arrests jumped to $100,000, reflecting the case’s urgency as days without proof of life mount.
Family anguish remains palpable. Savannah Guthrie, absent from “Today” to aid the Arizona effort, continues sharing emotional tributes — old videos of Nancy with grandchildren, captions pleading for her return. Husband Michael Feldman reposted suspect images with a raw appeal: “Someone out there may recognize this person. Please help us. Bring her home.” Siblings Annie and Camron have begged directly for contact from any abductor(s), stressing Nancy’s medical fragility and willingness to negotiate.
Ransom demands persist as a complicating factor. Multiple Bitcoin requests surfaced, one potentially credible due to private details, while fakes triggered fraud arrests. No verified communication or life signs have followed, fueling theories of financial motive tied to the family’s prominence or opportunistic crime.
The Rio Rico raid earlier in the week — detaining and releasing a man after a property search — proved fruitless, redirecting focus to video evidence. Desert searches continue, with agents combing foothills and roadways; the gloves find near the home underwent forensic review, though no public breakthroughs emerged from it yet.
Experts emphasize the videos’ power in crowdsourcing identification. Even masked, suspects leave traces: posture, stride, item specifics like backpack brands, or behavioral quirks. The amateurish camera tampering and odd holster placement suggest possible inexperience, which could accelerate tips from retail records, acquaintances, or witnesses.
As the investigation enters its critical second week-plus, this new footage represents the most promising development since the initial doorbell release. It narrows the window, multiplies the backpack identifiers, and raises the chilling possibility of multiple individuals or a deliberate getaway plan. With Nancy’s health needs pressing — daily medications, heart conditions, mobility limits — every hour counts.
The public remains gripped, sharing clips and theories across platforms. Whether this mystery man with two backpacks is the primary suspect fleeing, an accomplice, or an unrelated coincidence, the alignment is too close to ignore. Authorities hope one viewer recognizes the gait, the gear, or the timing — turning grainy night vision into the lead that brings Nancy Guthrie safely home.