
Over the last week, the Nancy Guthrie case has remained active, with no verified indication that police have issued a final resolution. Instead, the main developments have centered on a fresh public plea from Savannah Guthrie and her siblings, continued evidence review by investigators, and renewed media attention on key dates that authorities believe may be important to the case. Recent reporting from multiple outlets continues to describe Nancy Guthrie as missing and the investigation as ongoing.
The most significant update came on March 22, when Savannah Guthrie and her siblings publicly urged people in the Tucson area to reexamine anything they may have seen, heard, recorded, or dismissed earlier in the investigation. Their message emphasized that even a small memory, conversation, journal entry, text, or piece of camera footage could help move the case forward. The family said they still cannot find peace until their mother is brought home, underscoring that the search remains deeply personal and unresolved nearly seven weeks after her disappearance.
Coverage during the same period also highlighted the investigators’ continuing focus on a cluster of dates tied to the case timeline, especially January 11, January 31, and February 1. Reports said the family wants the public to think carefully about those dates in particular, as law enforcement continues trying to reconstruct the movements, surveillance, and possible planning connected to Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance. As of the latest reporting I found, no suspect had been publicly identified and no arrest had been announced.
Another important development involved the review of newly recovered material from security cameras on the property. Entertainment Weekly reported this past week that the FBI recovered additional images from cameras near the pool, backyard, and side yard of Nancy Guthrie’s home. However, those materials reportedly did not provide a direct visual record from the day she vanished. A follow-up report said the latest footage reviewed did not reveal new suspicious activity from the date of the disappearance, meaning investigators are still relying on a broader mix of evidence, including imagery, video recovery efforts, and lab analysis.
On March 20, Savannah Guthrie also returned to social media for the first time in nearly three weeks, a moment that drew added public attention to the case. That reporting said she remained away from regular on-air duties while the search continued. The same coverage repeated that authorities believe Nancy Guthrie was kidnapped and that the family-backed reward effort remains active, reflecting both the seriousness of the case and the family’s attempt to keep public awareness from fading.
Taken together, the last week’s reporting points to a case that is still in a difficult middle stage: highly active, emotionally urgent, and still without a final public breakthrough. The strongest verified update is not that police have closed the case, but that the Guthrie family has intensified its appeal while investigators continue reviewing evidence and refining the timeline.