The Lawyers Are Smart, And They're Hunkered Down
Here's one question that's been bugging me for several days: someone at Savannah Guthrie's level must be surrounded by an army of agents, lawyers, publicists, image consultants, and so forth, retained by both her and NBC. Some of these people must also be able to double as crisis managers, since someone in that position is likely to have some type of public "crisis" at any time, whether it be family dispute, serious illness, infidelity, divorce, DUI, shoplifting arrest, whatever, these are people who are skilled at keeping you out of the news or getting you into it as needed.
The biggest dog that isn't barking here is that there's no evidence of a professional publicist-cum-crisis-manager invovled in this whole hinky kidnapping story. But let's leave aside Savannah's status as a national media figure. Even a prosperous middle-class family is typically advised to have a trusted family spokesperson, maybe a good friend who's also a lawyer, to handle the press in the event, say, of a kidnapping or maybe a plane crash. Those most directly affected are normaly advised to stay out of public view and let the spokesperson take over, if only to avoid emotional overstress.
Why isn't this happening here? Instead, we've had either a blizzard of photos of Savannah posed with mum, Savannah all phony-baloney smiles, or Savannah herself in weepy videos pleading with either the kidnappers or the public. If Savannah herself or her family were unable to stop her from doing this, why couldn't NBC? I actually wonder if there might be something in her contract giving NBC control of her public appearances that should have been invoked. But I just used to be involved in crisis management in my day job, who am I to know?
But let's leave that question aside and go to Sean Hannity's interview with Dan Bongino, lately FBI Deputy Director, at 0:43 below:
So the FBI was brought in a couple days after, you have to have a request for assets to be brought in, or you have to have federal jurisdiction. This was done by request. That's why you saw the crime scene was reopened again. That was the FBI evidence response team going in to take over, that's all they do, and they do it best, and process the evidence at the scene. . . . I see three possibilities, Sean, I'm not going to weight them, . . . if you use Occam's Razor, that you could apply.
First would be, obviously, it's a kidnapping that was an intended kidnapping for a ransom payment.
. . . The second poosibility would be this was just a crime that went awry, someone was at the house, maybe it was a burglary, something went bad, and you've got some bad actors committing another crime unrelated, in other wosrds, requesting a ransom for something you didn't do just to take advantage of a situation like that.
The third possibility, again, this is where you kinda have to think outside the box, is, especially given some of the messaging we've seen lately, the possibility that there may have been some kind of medical emergency or something, and maybe, this was not a kidnapping. And . . . again, I'm not weighting these possibilities, when you can't find someone, at a crime scene like this, within the first couple of days, you either have really good, surgical-type operators, or the story you've been told, or you may have believed, may not be the story. I mean, think about it. There's no license plate reader trips. Social media exploitation turned up nothing. Cast analysis [?]. Cell phone analysis. There's other tools I don't really want to talk about, but I promise they're there, we've used them in cases, that none of this stuff was tripped after the Bureau came in and applied all their assets? It seems really, ah, strange.
I think we can safely assume that Savannah has her own lawyers, NBC has lawyers, and Fox News has lawyers that are perfectly aware that both Savannah and NBC have lawyers. The substance, and probably the specific wording, of this interview were fully vetted by Fox lawyers to avoid any possible implication that the Guthrie family was involved in any way with Nancy's disappearance -- but something's, ah, strange. What Bongino is saying is that no strange vehicles appeared near the house that night. No strange cell phones pinged off nearby towers. No other FBI tools that Bongino won't identify turned up any other outsiders.Except Nancy Guthrie disappeared. He's saying as clearly as Fox's lawyers will let him that the family was involved (I suspect the interview was reviewed again before it was aired). Let's put this in context, though the Bongino interview said nothing about it:
Megyn Kelly has confessed she believes authorities are "taking a very serious look" at Savannah Guthrie's brother-in-law in the disappearance of the TODAY co-host's missing 84-year-old mother, RadarOnline.com can reveal.
The statement comes after journalist Ashleigh Banfield reported on February 4 that Tommaso Cioni "may be the prime suspect," according to an "impeccable" law enforcement source of hers. Banfield repeated the claims on Kelly's Sirius XM show later that day.
Kelly, 55, noted the way in which TODAY has been reporting on the search of the Tucson, Arizona, home Cioni shares with Savannah's sister, Annie.
"It's interesting to watch NBC in the mornings on the Today show to see what they're reporting on this case, because there's no question in my mind, it will have been blessed by Savannah. There's zero doubt that they are asking her, 'Are you comfortable with this?' They would not want to upset her or get out ahead of their skis or go someplace where she didn't want it," the former Fox News host pointed out on her Monday, February 9, SiriusXM show.
Kelly observed how TODAY reported on the search of Annie's home after Banfield, 58, claimed that herand Cioni's car had been "towed, impounded, and taken into evidence."
"And they were the ones who broke the news that the search of Annie's home was consensual, as opposed to, via a search warrant. So, to me, I'm deducing, though I can't confirm it, as an independent fact, that she doesn't want it looking like her sister or anybody living in that home, like the brother-in-law, are in any way in trouble," Kelly surmised about how Savannah wouldn't want her brother-in-law named as a suspect.
Megyn Kelly in the course of her media career would certainly have been familiar with how corporate media attorneys would be on the case like white on rice. She also speculates, correctly in my opinion, that Savannah is controlling media coverage of the case to avoid any implication that her family, espeically her sister Annie and her bother-in-law Tommaso Contini, are involved.But what has me wondering is why nobody is quite sure if the"ransom" e-mails, said to be transmitted to the family via local TV stations, are authentic. If they aren't, then who sent them and why? One thing that might be inferred from the Bongino interview is that the Pima County Sheriff's Office made the request for the FBI to come in, possibly due to its concern that the family was trying to control the investigtion. The "ransom" e-mails would of course be key evidence in the investigation.
Any attempt to mislead investigators, for instance by concocting "ransom" e-mails, or claiming they had received "ransom" e-mails that turned out to be bogus, would be obstruction of justice. The same would apply to any attempt to cover up a fanily member's involvement in the crime. The problem, however, would be that if the e-mails are bogus, Savannah's personal involvement as the key family spokesperson in the investigation, responding personally to the bogus e-mails, would put her at considerable legal risk.
At mimimum, she would need to leave NBC, whether on "leave" or resign outright, at a time when NBC needed her to keep the Today show on an even keel. This would also damage NBC's credibility in general. I'll bet NBC's lawyers are thinking about this right now, but they're in reactive mode -- I'm sure they're thinking about what they'd need to do, but so far, no announcements have come from anywhere, not the police and not the FBI, and certainly not from the attorneys or the crisis managers, who are oddly invisible in any case.. My bet is the lawyers are smart, and they're hunkered down, but i'll also bet crisis managers for NBC are already on call. My Spidey sense tells me Savannah is a short timer except in terms of her possible sentence.






