Crime Stories with Nancy Grace - SAVANNAH GUTHRIE MOM MISSING: Day 16
Episode Date: February 16, 2026The FBI confirms a glove found near Nancy Guthrie's home appears to match those worn by the masked suspect seen in surveillance video. Sixteen gloves have been sent for analysis, with speculation that... many of the gloves were worn and discarded by search staff. Police activity over the weekend resulted in no arrests, and today, TMZ received a fourth email about the kidnapping. Joining Nancy Grace today: Rob Shuter - Host of Naughty But Nice Podcast, Author of Newly-released Novel, “It Started With A Whisper,” and Former publicist of Sean Combs; IG: @naughtygossip Josh Kolsrud - Criminal Defense Attorney and Former Assistant U.S. Attorney, Founder of Kolsrud Law Offices; Facebook and YouTube @KolsrudLawOffices Dr. Bethany Marshall - Psychoanalyst, Author: "Deal Breaker," and featured in hit show "Paris in Love" on Peacock; Instagram & TikTok: drbethanymarshall, X: @DrBethanyLive Brian Fitzgibbons – Director of Operations for USPA Nationwide Security (leads a team of investigators specializing in locating missing persons), Marine and Iraq Wat Veteran; Instagram: @uspa_nationwide_security Tami Ballard – DNA and Crime Scene Consultant, Crime Scene Investigation and Reconstruction, Former DNA Criminalist in the San Diego Police Dept. Crime Laboratory Scott Eicher - A Founding Member of the FBI’s Cellular Analysis Survey Team (C.A.S.T); Historical Cellular Analysis Expert; Former FBI agent of 22 years; Former Police Officer and Homicide Detective with Norfolk Virginia Police Dept. (having served 12 years); Currently with Precision Cellular Analysis handling Criminal, Defense and Civil Cases Dave Mack - Investigative Reporter, 'Crime Stories' See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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This is an I-Heart podcast.
Guaranteed Human.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
It's been two weeks since our mom was taken,
and I just wanted to come on and say that we still have hope.
And we still believe.
And I wanted to say,
to whoever has her or knows where she is,
that it's never too late.
And you're not lost or alone.
And it is never too late to do the right thing.
And we are here.
We believe.
And we believe in the essential goodness of every human being.
And it's never too late.
A man claiming to know who kidnapped Nancy Guthrie and her current location
reaches out to TMZ for the fourth time, still demanding $50,000 in Bitcoin up front.
Then he will provide the information.
The email is using the same Bitcoin account as previous emails and says in part,
I know what I saw five days ago south of the border.
And I was told to shut up.
So I know who he is and that was definitely Nancy with them.
This is now the second time the rat has seen.
suggested there is more than one person involved in the kidnapping. Also, in his previous
missive, he said, quote, be prepared to go international. The man says he has a burglary on
his record from 10 years ago, so he's scared to come forward, presumably fearing he'd be
implicated. TMZ replies directly to the individual with an offer. If you are for real,
send us the information regarding the whereabouts of Nancy and her kidnappers. We will
immediately forward the information to the FBI. If it leads to finding Nancy and or the kidnappers,
you then have a public record that you are the one responsible, thus ensuring you will get the
reward. The FBI is aware we are making this overture. This is the second note received by TMZ
after the rat said there would be no more communication. Nancy Guthrie missing day 16 and
that plea from our friend Savannah Guthrie, the most heartbreaking plea as of tonight.
Good evening. I'm Nancy Grace. This is crime stories. I want to thank you for being with us.
Savannah Guthrie, beaten down, exhausted, obviously not eating, appeals to the essential goodness, she says, that is in every human being.
Begging them, it's not too late to do the right thing.
Stating, obviously stating, she believes her mother, Nancy, is alive.
Also at this hour, breaking developments over the last weekend, over the last day.
Straight out to Dave Matt, Crime Stories Investigative Reporter, D-N-A, Tell Me Everything.
All right, starting at the beginning, Nancy.
DNA found at Nancy Guthrie's home has been determined to belong to someone not in close contact with Nancy Guthrie.
This is explosive information as it's the first indicator we have that DNA belonging to someone not related, not in close contact with Nancy found at the home.
Nancy, we also have the glove.
The glove found about a mile and a half from Nancy's home.
That too is being tested and that too has male DNA.
The glove with the DNA looks like what the glove we saw in the surveillance video from the nest camera on Nancy Guthrie's front door.
That glove that we saw in that video is what appears to be the glove found in the desert a mile and a half.
from her home with DNA.
So those are your two big DNA explosions right now in the investigation.
That's right.
The glove found near Nancy Guthrie's home about 1.5 miles from her home does contain DNA evidence.
All those so-called experts claiming it would not contain DNA are wrong.
Also, the glove found with DNA evidence on it appears to be what the drug.
the suspect in the video was wearing according to the FBI. The black glove found near Nancy
Guthrie's home contains DNA evidence and it is being tested. We could be hours away from that
DNA match. And again, the FBI says the glove appears to match the gloves worn by the
suspect on Nancy Guthrie's porch. This guy were showing.
you right now. The one with the DNA profile recovered is different from other gloves.
What does that mean that it is different from other gloves? Dave Mack, what other gloves?
Nancy, there have been reportedly 16 other gloves, maybe even more, that have been found in this investigation.
The Danty, the 16 gloves that have been found range in different colors from red to brown to black.
They range in the different types of gloves that are available.
Straight out to veteran trial lawyer Josh Coles Roo joining us.
Now criminal defense attorney, former federal prosecutor founder Coles Rood Law Offices.
He's joining us from that jurisdiction, Arizona.
Josh.
In my mind, I have leaped forward to a potential trial.
What a feel day the defense will have with these 16 gloves that are unrelated to the perp on the front porch.
Because just as the defense was going to do in the Brian Coburger case with the glove laying out in the parking lot, it's snowing, somebody dropped their glove out there, that was going to be the SOD.
some other dude that did it, right?
So I'm happy.
I'm thrilled we found a glove that seems to match the one.
And you and I talked about it, how sweaty his hands must have gotten during all that.
And the scenario of him is stripping it off and throwing it out the window as he leaves the scene.
But the other gloves are a problem, Coles Rude.
They are a huge problem for the prosecution.
You know, one of the most important things,
for a prosecutor is the ability to prove chain of custody, to be able to show that this is the item
that we're saying that it is. And when you have, I can't believe this, 16 other gloves that were
dropped there by volunteers or people working for law enforcement, it's beyond imagination that they could
do this and contaminate the crime scene.
Straight out to Tammy Ballard joining us.
Tammy is a DNA crime scene consultant, crime scene investigation and reconstruction expert.
Important tonight, DNA criminalist for the San Diego Police Crime Lab.
Tammy Ballard, this is a bombshell.
If these aren't the gloves worn in the video, let's see the video again.
and according to police sources, the pert was wearing gloves under the gloves.
We don't know that that's true.
Whatever the case, DNA has been found on these gloves, Tammy Ballard, and it is male DNA.
What comes next?
Next is the CODIS search.
So that's going to be the important search.
and it sounds like that's going to happen in real-time something like today,
and then they'll know if they have some sort of direction to go with that search,
if there's a hit.
If not, the next step would intuitively be,
can we start with the genealogy process and go down that path with a different DNA profile
from the same glove?
So hopefully it was a single source enough profile,
file that and there's DNA remaining so that they might have to be able to share that DNA with
that second process for genealogy. But it can be a multi-pronged approach to identify the
individual as fast as possible. Tammy Ballard, what is an STR analysis? That is what I would
consider your standard DNA testing, most forensic laboratories across the country. That is what we have
all used. It stands for short tandem repeat testing, very distinct, regulated, validated
locations of DNA that are being tested for potential comparison to suspects or uploads into
databases. Would this be a short tandem DNA test, a short tandem repeat? Yes, it is. This is a
traditional STR profile, that is what all of the forensic laboratories are using to compare to
a potential suspect.
Okay, then we will take the STR results and put it into CODIS straight out to Brian Fitzgibbon
is joining us, Director Operations, USPA nationwide security, his specialty, finding, missing
people.
He leads a team of investigators around the world.
locating missing people who is in CODIS.
Yeah, so you're going to have everybody in CODIS that law enforcement has had a sample from
or, you know, the FBI has loaded into that system.
So there's going to be a limited, I mean, it's a huge, a vast number of samples,
but it is limited in the sense.
And Tammy touched on this, the next step is that forensic genetic genealogy analysis,
where you're taking in other sources like Ancestry.com, 23 and Me,
all those private genetic testing organizations
where investigators will be able to hopefully try to map who this is.
Yes, COD is the combined DNA index system anachronism.
CODIS is FBI managed.
It's software, and it operates on local state and national DNA index system.
DNA databases. It IDs suspects and they do that by comparing convicted offenders, not necessarily
just felons, misdemeanor sometimes too, all of them across the country, missing people
and DNA found on crime scenes.
Koeberger, Brian Koberger's DNA is now in Kodas.
Now here's the problem with Kodas and Kodas is fantastic.
It matches DNA profiles even from unsolved cases to individuals and other crime scenes.
It also uses the 20-core short tandem repeat genetic markers.
Here's the thing.
The only people in CODIS generally speaking are convicts.
So if the perp is not already convicted, then once you put
put the DNA into CODIS.
You may not get an identical match, but you may get an eh match, which would mean the
perp is related to the person in CODIS.
It could be a brother, a cousin, a dad, a son, a nephew, a distant nephew, a distant cousin.
You'll get a quasi-match.
And that is what happened in Joseph DiAngela.
the Golden State Killer.
Once we got a little bit of a,
we had to go back into genetic genealogy.
But right now in CODIS,
we will get a match of sorts.
If there's a relative in CODIS,
Tammy Ballard, DNA expert, isn't that true?
Yes, it is going to be a different kind of search
in the CODIS database.
But first and foremost,
you're going to be comparing that traditional
STR profile from this.
unknown mail to convicted offenders who's in this database, but also other forensic unknown cases.
So samples from other cases that may have identified a potential perpetrator could also be
related to this case. So there is more information to glean from that. Then if you would want to do
the familial testing right after that, that's going to be another round of testing and comparison.
but again, this laboratory that is doing the work does have that in their wheelhouse.
So all of that can happen pretty much now simultaneously if they do want to do a genealogy search
with additional type of testing as well.
I do want to clarify one thing so we don't put the whole genealogy community in the panic zone.
But if they do the geneal...
Oh, is this about saying 23 and me, private testing labs?
Go ahead.
Ancestry.com, and there's only a few places that you can actually allow law enforcement to search in the genealogy databases.
That's family tree, DNA, and Jedmatch.
So within those two databases, the genealogy search can happen for law enforcement.
But Ancestry and the other genealogy companies are not allowing law enforcement to search.
at this time. And as a matter of fact, that was one of the problems in the Brian Koberger case.
Certain private genealogical testing labs were used reportedly, which would have opened up a
whole can of worms. What this means is that, for instance, if you do 23 and me, you don't agree
to have your DNA out there to be used in criminal testing or any other testing. So it's a privacy issue
for everyone that uses the website.
That said,
first to Codas
and then to genetic genealogy,
and again, that is how
one of the worst killers
was brought to justice.
A former cop,
Joseph DiAngelo,
the Golden State killer
through genetic genealogy.
Crime stories with Nancy Grace.
So we've got the glove.
You've got a Contemporary
contaminated crime scene, which is out in the open, by the way.
16 gloves that we know of were found.
Many of those could have been tossed by anybody, not a searcher, but maybe a searcher.
This, as we understand, a pool cleaning crew was allowed on the scene.
It never ends with the scene being open.
That said, there was another bust on Friday night.
What happened, Dave Mack?
Friday night, Nancy, two separate locations.
Okay, Pima County Sheriff's deputies and the FBI conducted this massive late-night SWAT operation just before midnight.
We've got SWAT descending on a home in Tucson, and they get three people detained, two guys and their mom, apparently.
But while this is going on, the SWAT team at the house, about two miles from Nancy Guthrie's home.
The FBI has a range rover pulled over in a parking lot of a restaurant.
That range rover person is also detained.
So we've got four people detained at the same time by SWAT and the FBI and deputies.
We've got the rangerover, a gray range rover that is searched while officers actually held up like a white sheet blocking the view from cameras to see what they were looking for in the back of that.
SUV, the range rover, and they actually swarmed in both these locations. They interviewed all three
at the house. They interviewed the range rover guy. And then, Nancy, they towed the range rover away
and let everybody go. Okay. You know, I don't like the way you said that, Dave Mack. I know,
guys, you're seeing video from our friends at Fox News. I feel and empathize with your let them go.
Okay, because again, after the last catch and release, everybody's hopes were dashed,
you think finally we've caught the perk, we're going to find Nancy Guthrie, she's going to be alive,
and then the person's released.
Okay, that was Palazuelos, Carlos, Carlos.
Now we've got neighbors, about a mile-ish away from Nancy Guthrie's home.
There was a big bust.
The SWAT team rolled out, the armored vehicles rolled out.
We thought, okay, now, now, now it's going to be solved.
We're going to finance.
He got through your life.
And they were released.
Another catch and released.
I hear your disappointment.
But straight out to Scott Eichert, joining us,
Digital Forensics expert, founding member of the FBI cast Cellular Analysis Survey team.
FBI 22 years, former police officer homicide with Norfolk, Virginia PD,
and currently at precision cellular analysis.
Scott, thank you for being with us tonight.
This is how I think they're zoning in on A, Palazuelos,
and B, those detained over the weekend that have now been released through cell phone data.
Explain.
In these cases, we do a tower dump where we're getting probably thousands of phones
that might have been in that area around the time Nancy Guthrie went missing.
So we're now finally starting to get through all that data trying to figure out which
ones are normally there like neighbors and which ones may have been passing through.
And then once you get the phone number, then you have to figure out, all right, who's actually
using this phone number?
Is it a fake name on the subscriber?
So then you have to figure out, all right, where may that phone be?
and I suspect that these are these stops
for the last couple of you were just talking about
are results of either LPRs or phones being in the area.
Now they're just trying to track it down,
see who's actually using those phones
and if they're related to the Nancy Duthry case.
This, as we learn, FBI,
they must have been watching crime stories
because as soon as the front porch video was released,
Our awesome staff in New York, Atlanta, Texas, and beyond got together and realized that the backpack was an Ozark from Walmart within, I would say, an hour of seeing it.
Angelica and others had identified it.
Also, they identified, our staff identified the jacket, we believe, coming from Walmart, and even the ski mask.
But now, everybody, you're validated.
Law enforcement revealing the clothes worn by the front porch perp.
Were bought at Walmart.
Were bought at Walmart.
Okay.
To Iker again, I will never forget watching Top Mom Casey Anthony on,
see their Walmart or Target video buying beer and a push-up bra.
while her daughter, Kelly, was missing.
And it's happened in so many cases,
I can't even begin to count them,
where a perp is caught on video.
Man, why do they always buy a tarp?
It's always a tarp and cleaning supplies.
That said, what's the next step?
Now that we know these items are bought at Walmart.
Once we get that type of information,
and we do this with the cell fonts, too,
with, you know, burner phones, we backtrack to where those items were purchased so that we can
actually, hopefully, find video of those actual purchases. And as you know, the Walmarts and the
targets, they have fantastic video. And those are really clear. So that does normally help us to
identify who actually had those items, purchased those items where it's using that Southerlyard device.
Don't you know the FBI is pouring through local Walmart video?
You said something that pierced my heart, Scott Eicher, again.
You mentioned that Walmart also sells burner phones.
You can identify cell numbers in the area.
I think that's how they got Carlos Pelisuelos.
I think that's why they honed in on the neighbor that has been released
because their cell phone is active around the time.
Guthrey goes missing and they've done a data dump and they're isolating phones used in the area
in that neighborhood in those hours and then expanding. Burner phones are a particular problem
for CAST. Explain the problem with burner phones. Well, we all kind of normal citizens
have post-paid phones. We use the phone and then we pay our bill. But most of the criminal
Element World uses burner phones or prepaid phones. And when you go into Walmart, you can buy the
phone and buy time minutes for that phone. And you don't have to put a name on it because you've
already paid the phone company. What they want is their money. So you don't have to put a real name
or a real address or anything on there. We've seen Bugs Bunny or Roger Rabbit or anything you want
to put in the subscriber information or nothing at all. So then that we have to figure out who
actually has that phone and who's using. And that is where the incredible video at Walmart will
come into play. So what are you saying in regular people talk is you can buy a burner phone
under any name, not your own, unlike your AT&T or your VZW or your T-Mobile bill where it's
your name and your address. And yeah, you can track that in about a split second. A.
burner phone? No. You have to find out where was the burner phone bought. Was it on a credit card? So you can trace the perp. Was it on video? Walmart has great video. NASA could take a lesson from Walmart. That said, it's a much more in-depth process because you could even pay with cash. So you may never know if it weren't for the video who bought the burner phone used outside Nancy Guthrie's home at the time she was kidnapped. Okay.
another thing happened over the weekend.
And this is amazing.
Dave Mack, tell me about the drone search for Nancy Guthrie's pacemaker.
Nancy, this is something that in reality is an incredible technology tool.
Using a drone that is outfitted to actually locate the Bluetooth signal that is sent from the pacemaker back to the Apple Watch,
they've been able to fly these drones at low level where they can find these Bluetooth signals.
And they've been flying them in a cross-grid pattern at low levels all over the Guthrie neighborhood,
as well as areas of the desert.
You know, they began four days out using helicopters flying very low and doing a grid search.
And they were also using technology then to try to locate the pacemaker.
But the drums take it to a whole new level with different technology that really does zero in specifically on this pacemaker Bluetooth.
Crime Stories with Nancy Grace.
You know what's interesting here, and let me throw this back to Fitzgibbons, Brian Fitzgibbon's USPA Nationwide Security.
A viewer wrote me and said at the very beginning, why can't they strap a divide?
to a dog, a device that would pick up the frequency of the pacemaker and walk it through the
neighborhood, walk it all around the neighborhood, and get other dogs with the same apparatus
and go out and out and out and out since we are pretty convinced someone that knew Nancy
Guthrie is responsible for her kidnap. And at first I'm like, outfitted dog. It wasn't
that bad of an idea. And I started thinking about it.
And I began researching how can you track a pacemaker all because of what that viewer wrote me.
You cannot track a pacemaker in that once it's away from its Bluetooth, it's no longer sending
information to the doctor's office or the clinic or the hospital.
That ends.
It doesn't have GPS in it.
But the viewer wasn't half wrong.
He was, she was all right because they can't be traced through that blue.
tooth frequency. It may not be connecting to the clinic or the doctor, but it's still emitting. It's
brilliant Fitzgibbons. Explain to me how they're doing this. How low do the drones have to fly?
Yeah, so the viewer's logic was spot on, right? And this technology has been around for a good
amount of time and had a fair degree of success, particularly in search and rescue operations.
All right. So these could be used after a natural disaster or, you know, a hiker loss from the mountains.
You know, the distance is going to vary, right? Anywhere from 30 to hundreds of feet in the air,
it's all going to depend on the power of that signal being emitted. So I don't think there's an exact
science on the pacemaker and how far the drone would need to be. But what I can tell you is they'll be able to zero in on the signal that that
pacemaker creates to filter out all the noise because unlike a massive grid search in a remote
area that these search and rescue applications are used to, this is flying over populated areas
where there's going to be a lot of signal noise that they have to filter out.
And Brian, here's the good news about pacemakers.
My dad had a pacemaker.
My mom has a pacemaker.
everyone's asking, what if the battery runs out?
Batteries and pacemakers usually last five to 15 years,
with seven to 12 years being the normal time the battery will last.
Why?
Because to change a battery in a pacemaker,
you actually have to operate.
It's probably a simple operation,
but you still have to go in.
The person has the pacemaker in their chest,
and you have to change the batteries.
So you don't want to do that very often with a heart patient.
So the norm is 7 to 12 years, 5 at the earliest, 15 at the longest.
So I'm not worried about the battery going out.
Now, very quickly, I want to follow up, just joining us now,
special guest, Dr. Bethany Marshall.
She is a renowned psychoanalyst out of Beverly Hills.
She's the author of Deal Breaker.
You can see her now on Peacock, and you can find her at Dr. Bethanymartial.com.
Dr. Bethany, when I showed that video of Savannah Guthrie, it broke my heart.
When I saw it for the first time, I felt nauseous thinking about Savannah.
She is so exhausted and she's not giving up.
No, she is not, Nancy.
and she goes out and she makes these statements without the studio lighting, the studio makeup,
any of the trappings of her profession, which she could use to try to appeal to whoever took her mother.
But she is coming out just as herself.
And in the very first video, Nancy, she keeps using the word you.
She's trying to form a relationship with whoever the perpetrator is.
And in this one, when she says that she believes that there's goodness,
in everyone. She's trying to create empathy. That empathy on the part of the perpetrator towards her,
towards her family, she's not coming out harsh or angry or we're going to come after you or we're
going to find you. Nothing punitive, Nancy. She is soft. She is engaged. And Nancy, I kind of feel like
she might know who she's speaking to. She's looking into somebody's eyes and heart, metaphor.
and saying, I know you, you know me, we are both human beings. Please, please bring my mother back.
And she's sort of implying no consequences as well, which of course there will be consequences,
but she's also trying to remove fear on the part of the perpetrator.
Well, I can tell you this, Cole's rude. I'm going to go back to Bethany in one moment.
The consequences will be a hell of a lot worse if Nancy Guthrie dies.
Absolutely. In Arizona, we certainly have a reputation for using the death penalty. And this certainly would be a case that would qualify if she is later found to have passed away. Now, what's interesting about this case is that there may be a parallel prosecution. And we've seen this before in Arizona in another high profile case. Senator Mark Kelly, you know, his wife,
Gabby Giffords was shot and almost killed along with federal judge John Roll. In those two cases,
you both had the federal prosecutors prosecuting at the same time as the state. And what I found
really interesting, Nancy, is that on Friday, the feds executed a federal search warrant, not a state
search warrant. And this could be an indication of the friction that is happening between the feds
and the state. Because I'll tell you, when I was, I was both.
both the state prosecutor and a federal prosecutor.
When I was in the state side, I often worked with the FBI,
and I would draft and issue the subpoenas.
What I would never expect for the same FBI agents
to go to the U.S. Attorney's Office
to do their own parallel investigation cutting me out of it.
So, you know, this is a really interesting development.
Should the sniffer technique have been used earlier?
You know, I have two gripes about this, Nancy.
The first is, you know, in any missing,
person's case, the most important time to gather and collect evidence is at the very beginning.
And by all reports, this so-called sniffer technology wasn't used for at least two weeks after
Nancy Guthrie was discovered missing. Also, what I don't like about this move is to tell the
public what it's doing with that type of technology because you're signaling to the bad guys
that we're looking for your Bluetooth devices.
And, you know, bad guys have been known to try to destroy evidence so they don't get caught.
And I would be concerned that this could put Nancy Guthrie in mortal peril should the bad guys be listening to the reports on TV.
You know, I want to go back to Scott Eicher, founding member of C-A-S-T.
Scott, can I see, Scott, please.
Is it true that you suggested to cast the use of the drones to try to find that
that Bluetooth frequency being admitted from Nancy's pacemaker?
I actually did send a message to cast on Saturday, so two days ago, and I said,
hey, has anybody thought about using the Bluetooth sniffer to go out and see if they can capture
the signal by Nancy Guthrie's pacemaker.
They said, well, I don't know, but I'll check and see if the command post is doing that.
And then the next day it came out on the media that they were doing that.
So I don't know if I provided them to do that.
I have a feeling they were doing that ahead of time.
It just hit me later on in the investigation.
Now, this device I've used before, it's very short range.
I was surprised they were trying to do it from a helicopter at one point in time.
Definitely vehicles or low flying drones because the distance for Bluetooth, as you might know,
when you walk away from your phone with your ear buds in, it's like 30, 40 feet at the most.
So they're going to have to get really close to this, you know, any Bluetooth device to be able to grab its signal.
So they're going to have a lot of work, but I think it's a great tactic to be using.
Well, you know, you're right.
I heard at the beginning once Nancy was 20 feet away from, I think it was 20 feet away
from the Bluetooth connection, the pacemaker information ended.
To Dr. Bethany Marshall joining us.
Dr. Bethany, you mentioned how Savannah was creating a connection with the PIRP, evoking
empathy.
who would take an 84-year-old grandma and use her this way?
We know it's a man.
We know it is a Hispanic male or a swarthy olive-complected male.
We know that there's facial hair.
We know his height between 5-9 and 5-11.
We know his medium build.
but who is this guy, Bethany?
Well, Nancy, he's only the face of the crime,
as Brian Fitzgibbon said on one of the shows.
He's just a foot soldier.
He's an amateur, Nancy, multiple gloves, potentially.
Looks like he has multiple jackets on,
potentially a tarp in his backpack.
He does not know that the camera is there.
This is not a very high-functioning guy, porch perp, is not.
So putting together the behavioral clues
that you and the panel have been discussing,
I wouldn't be surprised if he went himself to Walmart,
he'd have to make the purchase himself
because he knows his size, jacket, shoe, glove size, all of that.
I wouldn't be surprised to learn
that everything is all on one receipt,
even perhaps the burner phone.
So that narrows the search a little bit.
In terms of a non-custodial kidnapping, Nancy,
normally that is to control the victim,
whether it's a child or a young adult.
In this case, we have a geriatric person, an older person,
but for what reason would they control the victim?
Something that has come to mind, Nancy.
Oh, and by the way, with the gloves,
I'm not surprised about the 16 gloves
because we have web suit sleuths all over the place out there,
also searching, interfering and helping,
I don't know which way,
and also this guy's wearing multiple gloves potentially.
So I wouldn't be surprised.
I'm not surprised to learn
that they're picking up multiple gloves.
us out there. But think about your mother, Nancy, and how proud she has been over the years of you
having your own TV show. I'm sure she goes to, or I know she's housebound now, but to her doctors,
her physical therapists, her nutritionists, and talking about you and how proud she is of you.
And I wouldn't be surprised to learn that there's somebody in Nancy Guthrie's medical community
where she frequently visited and she would talk about Savannah and all of her kids and how proud
she is of them and how wonderful they are and have you seen my daughter on TV and if that didn't
incite somebody who's down on their luck or wanted to control her as a victim in some way to say,
oh gosh, this is my way out of my current financial predicament.
But then whoever took her is not sophisticated enough to find a good way to find a good way,
to get the money. And I think that's the paradox that's confusing everybody. You take this
geriatric person for some purpose, but now what's the purpose? So they can't implement the purpose.
So where does that put us in terms of this search? It's somebody who needed her for the purpose,
but then couldn't implement the purpose itself. Right. Tammy Ballard, joining us, DNA expert.
Tell me about Tammy Thino typing and how that could help.
Well, there's biogeographical analysis to give you sort of a visual aspect from where some of these people could come from and originate from what their nationality is.
That is testing that is also done pretty much simultaneously when they test for the genealogy.
to give somebody a little bit more of the idea of what this person may look like?
Yes, phenotyping, the process of measuring, analyzing physical, biochemical traits of the perp.
It identifies traits in biology, medicine, agriculture, deep phenotyping or digital phenotyping.
It's a DNA-based prediction of physical attributes, color of hair.
Do they have freckles, the pigment of the skin, and so much more?
Phenotyping could be used in this case.
It's an additional tool used by law enforcement, and I've seen it work.
joining us tonight is a PR guru, Rob Shooter, author of a brand new book that's climbing the charts
on Amazon. It's started with a whisper. And he's the star of naughty but nice. You can also find him
on his substack. Shooter, thank you for being with us. The facts are coming fast and furious,
but I want to take a moment and talk about my friend, your friend,
Savannah and this last plea.
I had to tell you all of her pleas had just been a gut punch,
but this last one, I mean, she's so tired.
She's just trying to get her mom back.
What can you tell us about your recollections of Savannah?
I keep saying she's just as nice and wonderful in real life as she is on the Today Show.
But yet online, everybody's hating on her.
And I don't really understand that.
Yeah, I've tuned that out, Nancy.
It's too painful for me.
I've been on the Today Show maybe 30, 40 times.
I've known Savannah since she was a correspondent on the show.
When she started that show, she did not start as the co-host.
She started as their White House correspondent.
And so I've known her for a really long time.
The last time I was on the show, Savannah interviewed me.
She's the real deal.
During commercial breaks, she laughs.
She asks you questions about your life.
She remembers details about your private life.
I was at a wedding about six months ago, and Savannah was at the wedding,
and we had a really great catch-up there.
She's the real deal, and we've worked in TV, Nancy, a long time.
It's not just TV.
I think a lot of businesses are like this.
People in the office on television at their job always normally, hopefully put on the best version of themselves.
And when they leave that job, it would be a little bit frosty, a little bit prickly.
Not Savannah.
She was the real deal.
And in New York, I've seen her out in restaurants.
I've seen her out at the theatre.
She's kind.
She's kind to people.
And she's very much aware that she has the dream job.
She always wanted to be a reporter.
She always tried her mom, encouraged her.
do this against all odds. This young reporter ended up hosting the Today Show, the biggest morning
show in the world, certainly in America, and she never forgot who she was. It would have been very
easy for Savannah when she became the co-host to become a diva. She could have become a star. We know them.
We know people on TV who act like that. Not Savannah. She was always nice to the crew. She was always
nice to the guests, he goes nice to the producers. And that's why this has really been a
good punch to everybody at NBC. Within that building, there are a lot of stinkers. Savannah is not one
of them. She's one of the good people. You know, it's really interesting. I'm soaking in every
word you said, Rob Shooter, because I don't get the hate focused on her at obviously the worst time in
her life, she lost her father when she was 16. I remember my dad had his first coronary thrombosis
when I was 16. And we had my birthday in the hospital, and I got my cross. And I remember being
afraid I would lose my dad. She did lose her dad. And now she's about to lose her mom. So I don't get the
hate, I guess you tell your clients to just ignore everything online. Yeah, you do. Savannah's got a tough
skin for somebody as kind, for somebody as gentle as she is. She works in a really tough business.
And being on television every single day in front of millions of people, you open itself up to a lot of
criticism about what you say, the way you look. And so she has done this for a long time. So I'm
told at the moment I spoke to some friends of her as people that work with her. She's just
focused on family. She's focused on getting her mom back, all that stuff online that's been there
for years, all the hate, all the criticism. I think she's tuning it out because let's be honest,
she's got a much bigger worry. I'm sure she doesn't care. She's her mom. So Rob Sheeter, this is
what I always say. And I don't know if you, the PR guru to the stars, would agree. But have you
ever called your cable company and said, wow, you know what? I watch crime stories tonight on YouTube.
and it was awesome.
I just want to thank you for all you did to make that possible.
No, you call the cable company and go, my cable's out.
Fix it.
Right.
You're horrible.
I hate you.
Right.
Nobody writes in or calls in good things.
It's only when you have a complaint.
So those are the people trashing Savannah at a time like this.
Who are those people, Rob?
They're terrible people, Nancy.
They're terrible, angry people.
And this is not about Savannah.
It's about them.
You know, I've ran many different websites and the comments, 80% of them are really hateful.
People don't comment when they want to say something nice.
So let's change that.
I try now when I go to a restaurant to leave a good review on Yelp instead of just the bad ones.
And so we can change the world if we start thinking.
Somehow I knew you're going to make this about you, Rob Sheeter.
It all goes back to what our grandma said.
If you can't say anything nice, just don't say anything at all.
I think we all agree on that.
Rob Sheeter, I'm not concerned about what's going to happen after we find Nancy Guthrie.
I'm concerned about finding Nancy Guthrie, but there's all the speculation brewing about Savannah leaving the Today Show.
That's not my concern right now.
We'll burn that bridge when we get there.
But what's that all about?
Yeah, the Today Show is a multi-million dollar business.
It is presented as a family, and I believe that's mainly true about them.
They care about each other over there, but it is a job.
And this is a company now that is trying to figure out what are they going to do.
It would be irresponsible of the executives to not have a plan B, to have a safety net.
So there is no date for Savannah to return.
My sources are telling me she might never return to the Today Show.
And she's certainly not going to return until there's some solution,
until there's some answers about her mom.
So Savannah's going to be gone from that show, probably for the next season.
six months, maybe longer.
And so they are looking at different options.
I'm told they're handling it quite carefully.
They don't want to be about contracts or money or opportunities for thirsty people on staff,
trying to get her job.
But there is a reality to this.
When somebody is away from a show, a lot of people are going around.
Well, I'm glad that you have looked into the Rob Shooter Crystal Ball,
and you can see that this case will be over in six months and put away like the
tea service when you're done with your tea. So thank you for that, Rob Schuter. I'm not concerned about
what's going to happen on a morning TV show. I'm concerned about finding Nancy Guthrie. And I hope
you're wrong. I hope that Nancy is found and Savannah returns to life as normal. That's my prayer.
Rob Scheter, guru to the stars and author of a brand new book. It started with a whisper. Thank you for
being with us tonight. Good to be with you, Nancy. And let me just add here. We talk about people on
television being generous and being kind and being authentic, you're the real deal.
To Dave Mack, Crime Stories investigative reporter, you've learned something that I consider
to be very probative regarding that polyester holster. Let's see the holster the perp had on
in a very bizarre manner. Tell me what you've learned about the holster.
Well, you know, it's interesting to note, Nancy, that most of what our perp,
was wearing from the backpack on, all available exclusively at Walmart stores.
But this very unique, cheap holster also available at Walmart.
But in Tucson, where they have more than a dozen Walmart stores, only two of the Tucson
area Walmart had that holster in stock.
Only two out of more than a dozen.
If you know or think you know anything about this case, whether you consider it to be large, small, inconsequential or not, please dial toll free 800-225-5-324 or if you wish to remain anonymous 520882-7463.
There is a $100,000 reward.
Thank you to our guests, but especially.
to you for keeping the search for Nancy Duthry alive.
Nancy Grace signing off for tonight, but I'll see you tomorrow night.
And until then, good night, friend.
