The Shadow of Doubt: Sheriff Nanos Refuses to Clear Son-in-Law as Search for

Savannah Guthrie new instagram video asking to Bring Nancy Guthrie home

TUCSON, AZ — In a tense press conference held Monday morning, Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos leveled with a grieving public, revealing that the investigation into the disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie has no “protected” individuals. Despite the frantic pleas from the Guthrie family, law enforcement is digging deeper into the events of January 31, refusing to categorically exonerate Tommaso Cioni, the son-in-law who was the last known person to see Nancy before she vanished.

“Talk to Everybody”: A Widening Net

Savannah Guthrie embraces her mother Nancy Guthrie.

Standing before a phalanx of microphones, Sheriff Nanos was direct when asked if Cioni—a local science teacher and husband to Annie Guthrie—had been ruled out as a suspect.

“We’re actively looking at everybody we come across in this case,” Nanos stated, his expression grim. “We would be irresponsible if we didn’t talk to everybody who had contact with her in those final hours. In an investigation of this magnitude, nobody is off the radar until we have Nancy home.”

While Nanos stopped short of officially naming Cioni a “suspect,” his refusal to clear the son-in-law has amplified the scrutiny surrounding the family’s inner circle. Cioni reportedly dropped Nancy off at her home in the Catalina Foothills following a family dinner; hours later, her security system was disabled, and she was gone.

Tommaso Cioni speaks to a blonde woman outside his home.

The Forensic Timeline: 2:28 A.M.

New details released by the Pima County Sheriff’s Department suggest a highly calculated abduction. Data retrieved from Nancy’s pacemaker app indicates her heart rate spiked significantly at 2:28 a.m. on February 1, just moments before the device’s bridge to her smartphone was severed.

Investigators are now focusing on a “missing window” of time between 10:00 p.m. and 3:00 a.m. Sources close to the investigation reveal that license plate readers in the area are being cross-referenced with GPS data from vehicles owned by all family members and close associates. The impounding of a vehicle from the Cioni-Guthrie residence last week was not just “routine,” insiders claim, but a targeted effort to find trace evidence of Nancy’s presence after the 10 p.m. drop-off.

The “Unorthodox” Ransom Demand

The FBI’s Behavioral Analysis Unit is currently assisting local deputies in dissecting a $6 million Bitcoin ransom note. The note, which arrived via a digital dead-drop, contained intimate knowledge of Nancy’s household layout, including the fact that her heart medication was left in a specific kitchen drawer.

“The level of familiarity shown in the demands is troubling,” said former FBI profiler Sarah Kaine. “It suggests the perpetrator didn’t just stumble into the house. They knew the routine, they knew the vulnerabilities, and they knew which family members to pressure.”

Savannah Guthrie: A Family in Limbo

Police Officials Deny Savannah Guthrie's Brother-In-Law As Suspect In  Mother's Abduction

As the legal and forensic machinery grinds on, Savannah Guthrie remains in Arizona, away from her anchor desk at Today. Sources say the family is “distraught” by the public’s focus on Cioni, maintaining a united front even as the Sheriff’s Department continues its aggressive vetting process.

Annie Guthrie and Tommaso Cioni have remained sequestered in their home, with their legal counsel issuing a brief statement on Sunday: “Tommaso has cooperated fully with every request from the Sheriff’s Department. He loves his mother-in-law and is as desperate for her return as the rest of the country.”

The Search Continues

Search and rescue teams, supported by K-9 units and drones, have expanded their radius into the rugged desert terrain surrounding the Sabino Canyon area. Sheriff Nanos concluded the briefing with a plea to the public for any dashcam footage from the night of the disappearance.

“We are looking for a needle in a haystack,” Nanos said. “But we are starting with the hands that were closest to the needle.”