Guthrie update.. Tommaso Cioni and Annie Guthrie: why his name is trending and the latest on Nancy Guthrie
Investigators in southern Arizona say they still do not know where Nancy Guthrie is, nearly four days after the 84-year-old mother of TV anchor Savannah Guthrie vanished from her home in the Catalina Foothills area north of Tucson. Authorities now treat the residence as a crime scene and say the case appears to involve Nancy being taken against her will sometime between Saturday night, January 31, and early Sunday, February 1.
The case has attracted intense online speculation—especially around Nancy’s son-in-law Tommaso Cioni—but officials have publicly cautioned against rumor-driven claims and emphasize that no suspect has been identified.
Guthrie update: What officials confirmed in the latest briefing
At a press conference on Tuesday, February 3, 2026 (ET), Sheriff Chris Nanos said investigators believe Nancy Guthrie was abducted and that her current location is unknown. He said detectives do not have a named suspect or a publicly identified “person of interest,” and he declined to speculate on how many people may have been involved.
Authorities also stressed urgency tied to Nancy’s health. She is described as mentally sharp but physically limited, with serious cardiac issues and critical medication needs. Investigators have said the time window matters because being without medication for days can quickly become life-threatening.
Key takeaways
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No suspect or person of interest has been publicly identified as of Wednesday, February 4 (ET).
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The FBI is assisting local investigators with technical work, including data analysis and vetting leads.
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Officials are evaluating claims involving ransom notes, but no demand has been publicly verified.
Crime scene evidence and the timeline investigators are building
Authorities have described “very concerning” conditions at Nancy Guthrie’s home. Public details have included signs consistent with forced entry and evidence that prompted detectives to secure the scene for forensic processing. Investigators have also referenced missing or damaged components of a door-area camera system.
What remains unclear in public statements is exactly what the forensic evidence shows, and whether any lab results have come back. Officials have said detectives are collecting and analyzing biological material, and they have urged nearby residents to preserve and share any time-stamped video from the late-night Saturday window into early Sunday morning.
A reward of up to $2,500 has been offered for images, information, or videos that lead to an arrest in the case.
Tommaso Cioni and Annie Guthrie: why his name is trending
Tommaso Cioni is married to Annie Guthrie, Savannah Guthrie’s sister. That makes him Nancy Guthrie’s son-in-law and Savannah Guthrie’s brother-in-law.
His name has circulated widely because he appears to be the last known person to have seen Nancy before she disappeared. Recent coverage has described a family dinner on Saturday, January 31, followed by Nancy being dropped off at her home around the late-evening hour. Concern escalated the next morning when she did not show up for church, prompting family and friends to check on her.
Online chatter has gone further, with viral claims that Cioni is a “prime suspect” or that investigators have seized a vehicle tied to the family. The sheriff’s office has publicly pushed back on those claims, emphasizing that the investigation has not named a suspect and warning that misinformation can distract from useful leads.
The practical point for the public: being the last known person to see someone is not the same as being implicated, and officials say they are following evidence and verifiable tips.
Ransom note claims: what’s still unconfirmed
“Ransom note” has become a major phrase attached to the case, fueled by social-media posts and television commentary. Officials have acknowledged that detectives are evaluating information about alleged notes and potential demands. However, authorities have not publicly authenticated any ransom note, confirmed a payment demand, or provided details such as amount, method, or deadline.
Investigators have also cautioned that publicizing unverified claims can generate noise—flooding tip lines, encouraging hoaxes, or interfering with sensitive investigative steps.
Family details and the surge in net worth questions
Savannah Guthrie has remained out of her usual on-air role this week and is in Arizona with family. She is married to Michael Feldman, and the couple has two children.
Public curiosity has also drifted toward “Savannah Guthrie net worth 2026” and salary questions. Widely circulated public estimates put her net worth around $40 million, with annual pay estimates often around $8 million. Those numbers are best treated as estimates, not confirmed contract terms, since compensation details for major TV talent are typically not disclosed in full.
What happens next
Investigators are likely to focus on three levers in the immediate term:
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Forensics and lab results from the home to refine the timeline
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Digital and video evidence that narrows vehicles and movements in the area
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Actionable tips tied to specific times, places, or original video files
Officials have repeatedly emphasized specificity: exact timestamps, clear vehicle descriptions, and raw footage are far more helpful than reposted clips or secondhand claims.
Sources consulted: Associated Press, Reuters, Los Angeles Times, ABC News