Police searched the neighborhood of Savannah Guthrie’s sister Annie on Tuesday as her mother, Nancy, remains missing.
FBI agents were seen going door-to-door and talking to neighbors in Annie and her husband Tommaso Cioni’s Tucson, Arizona, neighborhood.
This is the second time police have searched the couple’s property. Late Saturday, around 10:30 p.m. in Montana, law enforcement officials were reportedly seen taking photos at the home.
A major update on Nancy’s disappearance was released on Tuesday, when FBI Director Kash Patel released surveillance footage showing an armed suspect entering Nancy’s home. Photos and video show a masked gunman approaching Nancy’s front door in the early morning hours of February 1st.
The suspect was wearing a jacket and gloves and was walking with his head down. The suspect was also wearing a backpack and had an unidentified weapon in his waistband.
Investigators previously revealed that the video clearly showed the suspect’s eyes as he tried to disable the home’s security camera, but it was disconnected at 1:47 a.m. Montana time.
A statement released to reporters Tuesday said the FBI and Pima County Sheriff’s Department are working together to “recover images and video footage from Nancy Guthrie’s home that may have been lost, destroyed, or otherwise inaccessible due to a variety of factors, including the removal of recording devices.”
The video of the suspect was recovered from residual data on back-end systems, the statement said.
Savannah shared the footage on her Instagram on Tuesday, pleading again for help finding her 84-year-old mother.
“Someone knows this person,” the Today anchor wrote. “I believe she’s still outside. Let’s take her home.”
Tracy Walder, a former CIA official and FBI special agent, exclusively told Page Six that one detail in the new photos and videos of the suspects released could reveal their identities.
“I think the way[the suspect]walks is interesting,” Walder said. “(Their) way of walking is not very distinctive, but I think it might be of interest to the FBI.”
Walder also noted how the suspects’ eyes were exposed even though they were wearing masks, saying, “I’m shocked that (they) didn’t have anything like night vision glasses to block their eyes.”
Nancy was last seen on January 31, when Cioni dropped her off at his home after having dinner with his wife.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement Sunday that Nancy’s disappearance remains an “active and ongoing investigation” and continues to “conduct follow-up investigations at multiple locations.”
“Investigating authorities have not identified any suspects, persons, or vehicles involved in this incident,” the statement said.
