Does Anyone Else Think The Nancy Guthrie Kidnapping Case Is Hinky?
Kidnapping for ransom went out of style with the Lindbergh Baby, but even that case was hinky.
[T]he famous father took personal charge of many aspects of the investigation. He isolated household staff who may have had knowledge of his son’s medical condition from questioning by authorities including J. Edgar Hoover and the FBI. Also, following a cursory autopsy, he ordered the body cremated and the ashes scattered.
And of course, it was a media sensation. Fast forward to the JonBenét Ramsey case, which involved a hinky ransom note, even though the child was later found strangled in the family home. It was also a media sensation, especially due to JonBenét's participation in child beauty pageants. But there are very few parallels in the real world. YouTuber crminal lawyer Bruce Rivers says on his channel, "I've been practicing law for almost thirty years. I've never once seen a kidnapping-ransom case." In other words, all the cases we see seem to be made up by media figures chasing another 15 mionutes of fame, not criminal masterminds.Add to that trash media TMZ taking an active role in the story, transmitting one of the putative ransom notes:
Beyond that, the story involves a media figure, Savannah Guthrie, Nancy's daughter, and it's being pursued most avidly by Megyn "Me Again" Kelly and Ashleigh Banfield, all three middle-aged TV ladies approaching career twilight despite the most determined efforts of medical science:Harvey Levin on Hannity: "The letter begins by saying she is safe but scared, and they go on to say she knows exactly what the demand is. They are, through us, telling the family exactly what they are demanding, and they are saying that Nancy is aware of it. They are also saying… pic.twitter.com/2GhmZ2zGiJ
— Rantingly (@rantinglydotcom) February 6, 2026
But even though the case has been in the headlines for a week, I'm not seeing anyone asking straight out if this is all a hoax. So I put the question to Chrome AI mode, "Is the Nancy Guthrie kidnapping a hinky story?" It replied,
The abduction of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie, has been described by both the public and experts as "hinky" or "unusual" due to several bizarre and conflicting details.
While authorities officially maintain it is a kidnapping, several elements have fueled public skepticism and intense investigation:
Precise Timing & Tech Disruption: Surveillance data shows her Ring doorbell was disconnected and physically removed at 1:47 a.m. on Sunday, February 1, 2026. Minutes later, at 2:28 a.m., her pacemaker stopped syncing with her phone, suggesting a medical event or physical intervention.
The "Blood Trail": Investigators found blood splatters on the porch and along the pathway to the driveway, which DNA testing confirmed belonged to Nancy, indicating a violent struggle.
Ransom Confusion: A ransom note sent to news outlets contained "sensitive information" about the crime scene known only to the abductor, yet it lacked a way for the family to contact the author. Additionally, the FBI arrested one "ransom impostor" attempting to profit from the case.
Motive Mystery: Law enforcement stated they do not believe the motive was a standard robbery or home invasion, deepening the mystery of why an elderly woman with limited mobility was targeted.
Family Plead: Savannah Guthrie and her siblings released an emotional video on Instagram stating they are "ready to talk" but demand proof of life due to the ease of AI manipulation.
But not even AI caught that last point: one one hand, the Guthrie family pleads with the kidnapper to talk, but law enforcement thinks the family may be involved:
Police are not ruling out any suspects as they investigate Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance — with Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos refusing to categorically say the son-in-law who last saw her was off their radar.
“We’re actively looking at everybody we come across in this case, we would be irresponsible if we didn’t talk to everybody,” Nanos said when asked by reporters if Nancy’s son-in-law Tommaso Cioni was a suspect.
In fact, nobody's even sure if the various messages from the kidnappers are authentic:
"The FBI and Pima County Sheriff's Department are aware of a new message regarding Nancy Guthrie. Investigators are actively inspecting the information provided in the message for its authenticity," officials wrote on social media.
A hoaxer has already been arrested for another note:
Derrick Callella, 42, is accused of sending the Guthrie family a hoax ransom letter. Authorities initially said Callella was from Torrance, but later clarified that he's from Hawthorne.
Callella was arrested by the FBI in Hawthorne on Thursday and appeared in a Santa Ana federal courtroom on Friday afternoon.
Well, let me see. According to one of these notes, we're not sure exactly which and whether it's real, someone is demanding a gazillion bucks in bitcoin as ransom. Now, who would you think of to kidnap for a gazillion backs in ransom? A relative of Elon Musk? Donald Trump? Bill Gates? Jeff Bezos? Yeah, they all have good security, but someone must have fallen through a crack. Heck, Howard Hughes's aunt was my parents' neighbor, you could have snatched her just like that.Just a little research would have shown several good candidates among relatives of really rich people. Instead, looking for a gazillion bucks in bitcoin as ransom, they focus on Savannah Guthrie's mother. Nothing fits here.
And why would Savannah Guthrie want to be the focus of national hysteria? After all, the conventional wisdom is that she's safe at NBC:
Guthrie, 50 [no, she's 54 now], has her contract coming up for renewal next year [2025], and honchos are worried she may also decide it’s time to seek new horizons.
The veteran broadcaster, who is purportedly paid more than $8 million a year, has co-anchored “Today” since 2012 and steered the show through the Matt Lauer sex scandal that rocked the network seven years ago.
“Savannah’s contract is coming up next year and they want to keep her and will be doing anything they can to continue their relationship with Savannah as a means of not overhauling everything,” an NBC insider spilled to Daily Mail.
Nevertheless, I smell the same desperation that seems to have been behind the Lindbergh Baby and JonBenét Ramsey cases -- and outside of those, there are almost no similar high-profile kidnapping cases that aren't hoaxes. And just looking at the publicity shots of her and her mom over the past week, I have a deep and troublng sense that we're looking at an attention whore.






