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A bombshell third Nancy Guthrie ransom note was sent to TMZ, reportedly including a demand for bitcoin in exchange for information on the 12th day of the bizarre missing person case.

On Wednesday, the FBI announced it is carrying out a fresh search of Nancy Guthrie’s Catalina Foothills neighborhood north of Tucson, Arizona. Detectives have also discovered a black glove from the roadside 1.5 miles from the home, The Post exclusively revealed.

The timeline of the disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s mom:

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Here’s the latest on Savannah Guthrie’s missing mom Nancy Guthrie

'Today' viewership jumps 23% as Savannah Guthrie's mom remains missing

By Anna Young

Viewership for "Today" has soared as audiences tune in for updates on anchor Savannah Guthrie's 84-year-old missing mother, Nancy, who was abducted from her Arizona home nearly two weeks ago.

The NBC program's audience jumped 23% last week, adding 624,000 viewers from the same period last year while the heartbroken TV host has been away from the morning juggernaut since her mom disappeared from her Tucson home on Jan. 31, Variety reported, citing Nielsen data.

Between Feb. 2 and 6, the morning show averaged nearly 3.32 million viewers, surpassing ABC's "Good Morning America" at about 2.91 million and 1.84 million for CBS' "CBS Mornings," the data shows.

"Today" dominated the morning airwaves, grabbing 41% of viewers and leading its rivals both overall and in the crucial 25-to-54 demo.

Nancy hasn’t been seen since Jan. 31 around 9:45 p.m., when her son-in-law dropped her off at her Tucson home after a dinner with family.

She was reported missing the next day when she failed to show up for church. Soon after, police launched a criminal investigation.

Anchors Hoda Kotb and Craig Melvin on set of the Today Show, Feb 11, 2026
Anchors Hoda Kotb and Craig Melvin on the Feb. 11 episode of "Today," which has been dominating the airwaves since coworker Savannah Guthrie's mom vanished two weeks ago. NBC

Authorities have not identified any suspects behind the kidnapping, in which the elderly grandmother seems to have been forced from her home, leaving a trail of blood behind.

On Tuesday, the FBI released chilling footage of a man with black gloves, a ski mask, and a holstered gun destroying the security camera on her door, with federal investigators later finding a black glove as part of an “extensive search” of the neighborhood.

Meanwhile, a mysterious note was sent to TMZ Wednesday morning demanding a Bitcoin transfer in exchange for information about Guthrie’s captor.

TMZ reported that the $67,000 payment would be in exchange for the “name of the individual involved.”

The letter -- the third alleged note sent out since Nancy was last seen -- contained details of a working bitcoin address, TMZ host Harvey Levin said during Wednesday’s appearance on Fox News’ “America Newsroom.”

The self-proclaimed kidnappers have demanded millions of dollars in cryptocurrency, setting a final deadline for Monday, Feb. 9 -- but have failed to provide proof of life or additional information.

NPR host compares masked Guthrie suspect to 'ICE agent'

By Fox News

The FBI has released doorbell camera footage of a masked individual tampering with Nancy Guthrie’s front door camera in Tucson, Arizona, around the time of her disappearance. An NPR co-host noted the suspect’s clothing resembled that of a federal immigration agent. The FBI is offering a $50,000 reward for information.

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Exclusive: Investigators find black glove during hunt for Nancy Guthrie's kidnappers — and The Post was there

By Georgia Worrell and Jared Downing

TUCSON, Arizona — Investigators have recovered a black glove from a roadside near Nancy Guthrie’s house — potentially a major clue in the search for the masked thug who is suspected of abducting the 84-year-old woman, The Post can reveal.

Detectives recovered the clothing item, which resembles the pair worn by the armed perpetrator caught on video, about one and a half miles from Guthrie’s home.

A black glove caught on a thorny bush, with rocks and dried grass in the background.
Detectives have recovered a black glove from the roadside 1.5 miles from Nancy Guthrie’s home. Andy Johnstone for NY Post
Video and photos show investigators pulling the glove from the low, desert shrubbery in Guthrie’s secluded desert suburb at the edge of Tucson. Andy Johnstone for NY Post

Video and photos show investigators pulling the glove from the low, desert shrubbery in Guthrie’s secluded desert suburb at the edge of Tucson.

Authorities have not identified any suspects behind the presumed kidnapping, in which Guthrie seems to have been forced from her home, leaving a trail of blood behind.

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Investigators recover small black item from side of road near Nancy Guthrie's house

By Georgia Worrell

TUCSON — Investigators in Arizona on Wednesday afternoon bagged a black item on the side of the desert road just over a mile from Nancy Guthrie's home.

Officials were seen canvassing the side of the road at the intersection of Calle La Vela before placing the small black item into a paper bag.

The FBI earlier on Wednesday said it was conducting an "extensive search along multiple roadways" in the Catalina Foothills area where Guthrie lives and vanished from on Feb. 1.

Exclusive: How bitcoin exchange gave authorities’ ‘control’ over Nancy Guthrie’s kidnapper: crypto expert

By Leah Bitsky

Authorities now have the upper hand against Nancy Guthrie’s purported kidnapper, according to a cryptocurrency expert.

Bezalel Eithan Raviv, the CEO and founder of Lionsgate Network — a crypto recovery service with expertise in blockchain forensics — spoke with Page Six after a deposit was made into a bitcoin wallet related to Guthrie’s ransom note late Tuesday.

More photos of Nancy Guthrie from the photos section of her facebook
A cryptocurrency expert believes Nancy Guthrie's purported kidnapper just lost the upper hand. Facebook/Nancy Guthrie

“If the reported $150 transaction to the alleged ransom bitcoin wallet is accurate, it aligns with a known investigative tactic,” Raviv said. “A small ‘test’ transfer can sometimes be used to confirm that the wallet is active and to trigger blockchain monitoring tools.”

The Israeli tech entrepreneur noted that, despite misconceptions, bitcoin is “not anonymous” and is very much traceable.

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FBI launches fresh search near Nancy Guthrie's home

By Anthony Blair

TUCSON — The FBI has announced it is carrying out a fresh search of Nancy Guthrie's Catalina Foothills neighborhood north of Tucson, Arizona.

"This morning, numerous FBI agents are conducting an extensive search along multiple roadways in the Catalina Foothills area related to the Nancy Guthrie investigation," the FBI said in a statement Wednesday.

Investigators searching the area near Nancy Guthrie's house on Feb. 11, 2026.
Investigators searching the area near Nancy Guthrie's house on Feb. 11, 2026. AP Photo/Ty ONeil

Handfuls of armed FBI and Pima County officers were seen walking slowly alongside the road, closely examining the desert brush and stopping to talk to residents out walking their dogs.

"We are asking the media and motorists to follow all traffic laws and to remain especially cautious when passing law enforcement personnel near the roadways," the statement continued.

"We appreciate the assistance and support we have received from the Tucson community. The FBI continues to offer a $50,000 reward for information leading to the recovery of Nancy Guthrie. You can help by submitting tips to the FBI at 1-800-CALL-FBI," the statement from the Phoenix field office concluded.

A law enforcement officer checking vegetation in the area near the Catalina Foothills home.
A law enforcement officer checking vegetation in the area near the Catalina Foothills home. AP Photo/Ty ONeil

Catalina Foothills, a sparsely populated area of winding, unlit roads and unfenced houses, has become the center of a national media storm since the disappearance of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's elderly mother.

The 84-year-old, who has a pacemaker and requires daily lifesaving medication, was last seen on the evening of Jan. 31 after being dropped off home by her son-in-law, Tommaso Cioni, who also lives in Catalina Foothills.

Third Nancy Guthrie ransom note sent to TMZ

By Anthony Blair

A new letter in the bewildering Nancy Guthrie case has been sent to TMZ, reportedly including a demand for one bitcoin in exchange for information about "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother's kidnapper.

TMZ reported that the $66,000 payment would be in exchange for the "name of the individual involved."

Savannah Guthrie and mother Nancy Guthrie on Thursday, June 15, 2023
A new letter in the Nancy Guthrie case has been sent to TMZ, reportedly including a demand for one bitcoin in exchange for information about the kidnapper. Nathan Congleton/NBC via Getty Images

The letter, the third alleged note sent out since Nancy was last seen on Jan. 31, contained details of a working bitcoin address, TMZ host Harvey Levin said during Wednesday's appearance on Fox News' "America's Newsroom."

"They said they want one bitcoin sent to a bitcoin address that we have confirmed is active. It's a real bitcoin address, and as they put it, time is more than relevant," Levin said. "So we have no idea whether this is real or not. But they are making a demand."

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FBI looking at multiple persons of interest in Nancy Guthrie's disappearance: Kash Patel

By Anthony Blair

The FBI is looking at multiple persons of interest in the search for Nancy Guthrie's kidnapper, FBI Director Kash Patel said hours after releasing multiple surveillance stills and videos of an armed suspect outside her house.

"Without polluting the investigation, I will say we have made substantial progress in these last 36 to 48 hours, thanks to the technical capabilities of the FBI and our partnerships, and I do believe we are looking at people who, as we say, are persons of interest," Patel told Fox News' Sean Hannity on Tuesday night.

"As you know, with any investigation, you're a person of interest until you're either eliminated or you're actually found to be the culprit or the culprits involved, and that's the stage we're at right now," he added.

stigation (FBI) Director Kash Patel delivers remarks on an arrest connected to the 2012 U.S. Embassy attack in Benghazi, at the Department of Justice on February 6, 2026 in Washington, DC.
"I do believe we are looking at people who, as we say, are persons of interest," Patel told Fox News' Sean Hannity on Tuesday night. Getty Images

Patel was speaking after authorities in Arizona detained an individual in Rio Rico, Arizona, south of Tucson, in connection with Nancy's disappearance.

The individual, FedEx delivery driver Carlos Palazuelos, was later released without charge early Wednesday.

On Tuesday, surveillance footage showing the alleged kidnapper of "Today" show co-host Savannah Guthrie's mother on the morning of her disappearance was released by authorities.

Ex-FBI agent reveals reason why no car has been found in Nancy Guthrie abduction mystery

By Anthony Blair

A former FBI agent suggests that Nancy Guthrie’s abductor exploited the unlit streets and lack of surveillance cameras in her Arizona neighborhood to evade detection.

An aerial view of Nancy Guthrie's house
The layout of her remote Catalina Foothills neighborhood would have made it easier for the suspect to use multiple escape routes without being captured on camera. Rebecca Noble for NY Post

The layout of her remote, pitch black Catalina Foothills neighborhood would have made it easier for the suspect to use multiple escape routes without being captured on camera.

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Delivery driver detained over Nancy Guthrie's kidnapping insists he's never heard of her or 'Today' host Savannah

By Emily Crane

The delivery driver briefly detained over Nancy Guthrie's kidnapping insisted he's never heard of the missing matriarch or her famous daughter, Savannah Guthrie.

"Never until today," Carlos Palazuelos told reporters when asked if he knew anything about the “Today” show co-host and her missing mom. "I don't know anything."

Carlos Palazuelos speaking to reporters
"Never until today," Carlos Palazuelos told reporters when asked if he knew anything about the “Today” show co-host and her missing mom. "I don't know anything."

Despite the intense media coverage, he said he had to Google Nancy's name after being questioned over her disappearance.

Delivery driver who was detained believes relative tipped off police that his eyes looked similar to masked suspect

By Emily Crane

The delivery driver briefly detained in the kidnapping of Nancy Guthrie believes he was questioned because a relative told cops his eyes looked like those of the masked suspect spotted in eerie surveillance video.

Carlos Palazuelos, a local delivery driver in the Tucson area, was questioned and then released late Tuesday -- just hours after the FBI released the disturbing surveillance clip of the suspected abductor lurking outside the 84-year-old's home.

This is Carlos who says he was pulled over by police and was accused of kidnapping Nancy Guthrie.
Carlos Palazuelos, a local delivery driver in the Tucson area, was questioned in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie and then released late Tuesday. CBS News

"Until right now, all I know is that they showed my in-law a picture of somebody wearing a mask, or something, and they supposedly looked like my eyes," the 36-year-old told Fox News shortly after he was released.

He told CBS News he had never heard of Nancy Guthrie or her "Today" show host daughter Savannah, despite the intense media coverage of the matriarch's kidnapping.

"I didn't do anything. … I'm innocent," he said, saying he was "shocked" at getting detained.

He added that investigators probed him on where he worked and his whereabouts the night Nancy vanished.

Investigation at Rio Rico home cleared hours after person of interest released

By Nicholas McEntyre

Authorities have wrapped up their investigation at a home in Rio Rico, where a man who police questioned in connection to Nancy Guthrie's abduction lived, Fox News reported.

The massive law enforcement presence in the small border town — approximately 60 miles from Tucson, Arizona — was cleared hours after a man named Carlos was released from police custody following questioning in the disappearance of the 84-year-old.

A man named Carlos speaks to reporters after being released from police custody on Feb. 11, 2026.
A man named Carlos speaks to reporters after being released from police custody on Feb. 11, 2026. CBS News
Law enforcement agents clear the scene outside a home in Rio Rico, Arizona, on Feb. 10, 2026.
Law enforcement agents clear the scene outside a home in Rio Rico, Arizona, on Feb. 10, 2026. Andy Johnstone for NY Post
Law enforcement cars and police tape line the roads leading to the home.
Law enforcement cars and police tape line the roads leading to the home. Andy Johnstone for NY Post

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