Surveillance video at Tucson Circle K may hold clue in Nancy Guthrie disappearance
A Circle K convenience store on Oracle Road in Tucson handed over surveillance footage to law enforcement late last week after receiving a tip about a "vehicle of interest" in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of "Today" show anchor Savannah Guthrie.
The footage could mark one of the first tangible leads in a case that has gripped national attention. But as of Monday afternoon, law enforcement had not publicly mentioned the surveillance video, and no suspect or person of interest is in custody, News Nation reported.
A Circle K spokesperson confirmed the visit to NBC News, saying employees cooperated after "receiving a tip regarding a vehicle of interest."
The spokesperson added that staff "provided them access to the store's surveillance video." Which law enforcement agency made the visit remains unspecified in public reporting — a small but telling detail in a case where official information has been tightly controlled.
What we know — and what we don't
Nancy Guthrie is missing. The circumstances surrounding her disappearance have been described in terms of a suspected kidnapping, though no abduction has been officially confirmed. Unnamed officials have said that "no lead is too small to follow up on" in the search.
The Circle K location sits near the Tucson home of Annie Guthrie, Nancy's daughter. Annie and her husband, Tommaso Cioni, have not been named as persons of interest or suspects in the case. That distinction matters — and it's one the article of record makes explicitly.
But the activity around that home tells its own story.
Late Saturday night, police were seen at Annie Guthrie's residence. Through shaded windows, photo flashes were visible. After nearly three hours inside, deputies emerged wearing blue gloves and carrying brown bags.
No official statement accompanied any of it — no explanation of whether investigators executed a search warrant, conducted a consent search, or what those bags contained. The silence is conspicuous.
A family's plea and an investigation's tension
On Saturday, the family issued another video message directed at Nancy Guthrie's "supposed abductor" — phrasing that itself signals uncertainty. The word "supposed" does a lot of heavy lifting. It suggests someone is being addressed, but no one has been identified, charged, or even publicly pursued.
Meanwhile, a notable tension sits at the center of the public record. The sheriff's office said Saturday that authorities have not identified any vehicles connected to the case. Yet the Circle K tip involved a "vehicle of interest." Whether that gap reflects the pace of an active investigation or a disconnect between agencies is unclear.
These kinds of informational seams are common in high-profile missing persons cases — and they're exactly where the public's patience starts to fray. When law enforcement stays quiet, speculation fills the vacuum. When family members issue emotional appeals while deputies carry evidence bags out of a relative's home, the optics collide in uncomfortable ways.
The media dynamic
It's impossible to separate this case from the identity of the missing woman's daughter. Savannah Guthrie is one of the most recognizable faces in American morning television. That fact guarantees saturation coverage — and it should. A missing mother deserves every resource and every camera, regardless of whose mother she is.
But it also means the investigation operates under a spotlight that most missing persons cases never receive. Every detail — the Circle K footage, the late-night police visit, the brown bags — gets amplified and dissected in real time. For investigators, that pressure can be clarifying or distorting, and the difference usually depends on how disciplined the agencies involved choose to be.
What comes next
The surveillance footage from Oracle Road either contains something useful or it doesn't. The vehicle of interest is either connected to Nancy Guthrie's disappearance or it's a dead end pursued in good faith. The brown bags carried from Annie Guthrie's home either hold evidence or they don't.
None of that has been resolved publicly. And until it is, the only honest posture is the one investigators are apparently taking — careful, quiet, methodical.
Somewhere in Tucson, a mother is missing. That fact deserves more than speculation. It deserves answers.






