Gayle King is speaking out again about the disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s mother, Nancy Guthrie.
“Somebody knows something,” the CBS Morning host exclusively told Page Six’s Desiree Murphy at Michael Rubin’s Fanatics Super Bowl Party in San Francisco on Saturday.
She added: “Now is the time for someone to speak up.”
King, 71, spoke out about the crisis Thursday, calling the situation “unimaginable.”
“We’re starting things off a little differently this morning because, like you, we’re waking up this morning with very heavy hearts. We’re praying for our friend and colleague Savannah Guthrie,” she said on Thursday’s episode of “CBS Morning.”
“His mother Nancy is still missing at this time and late last night the Guthrie family released a very emotional message.”
Afterwards, Dr. King became emotional and said Nancy’s disappearance was an “unimaginable situation for the Guthrie family.”
“Savannah just came up to me and said, ‘Mommy,'” she said, referring to a social media video the “Today” anchor shot with her brother Camron and sister Annie on Wednesday. “To hear a grown woman say, ‘Mom, we’re all looking for you.’ We’re all looking for her.”
“This is something none of us could have imagined,” King continued.
King called the kidnapping charges “very frightening and very disturbing,” and said, “I can’t help but think about Savannah and her brother putting out that video message.”
“My heart just breaks for her,” she said. King also noted that Anchor shares a mother-daughter bond with Nancy. “We all know how close she was to her mother,” she told viewers.
“You keep seeing those pictures over and over again. We’re trying to make sense of something that doesn’t make sense. And that’s why we keep suffering and gasping for something. Please help us understand how this is happening, why this is happening, and what we can do about it.”
She added: “It’s very, very scary.”
Nancy, 84, was last seen Saturday night after being dropped off at her home in Tucson, Arizona, after a family outing. She was reported missing on Sunday after failing to attend church.
On Monday, authorities announced they were treating the Guthrie matriarch’s home as a crime scene. Police believe she was “taken from her home against her will.” Saturday, the Pima County Sheriff’s Office said.
“At this time, we are not confirming or releasing additional details regarding our analysis.”
“As we have stated numerous times, it is standard practice to seek available video from nearby homes and businesses and this is part of our ongoing investigation.”
Police also seized a vehicle parked in Nancy’s garage and a camera installed on Nancy’s roof after a neighbor reported it, and TMZ reported that a floodlight appeared to have been removed from Nancy’s back door.
Earlier this week, TMZ reported that Savannah received a ransom note demanding millions of dollars in Bitcoin in exchange for the return of her mother.
Earlier this week, FBI Phoenix Special Agent Heiss Jahnke said in a press conference that the ransom note asked for a “money transfer” to be sent by a deadline of 5pm (Montana time) that same day.
The brothers posted a new video on social media again on Saturday.
“We received your message and we understand,” the anchor said in the dark video.
“We now ask that you please return our mother to us so we can celebrate together,” she continued. “This is the only way we can achieve peace. This is something that is very valuable to us and we will pay the price for it.”
