Savannah Guthrie’s sister and brother-in-law have been photographed for the first time since their mother, Nancy Guthrie, disappeared from their home.
Annie Guthrie and Tommaso Cioni kept a low profile during Tuesday’s drive, according to photos obtained by Page Six.
Savannah’s brother tried to hide his face with a pink hoodie as he left the couple’s home in Tucson, Arizona.
Annie’s husband did the same, pulling his sweatshirt up over his nose and wearing sunglasses.
Their outing marks the first time Nancy’s family has been found since she became the subject of a missing persons investigation.
According to the New York Times, Cioni was the last person to see Nancy — despite previous reports, it was Annie — who dropped her mother-in-law home around 9:30 p.m. Saturday after dinner.
It’s unclear when Cioni married into the Guthrie family, but Annie called him her husband and her “greatest teacher” in a 2013 interview.
“He’s a great performer,” she told Women’s Quarterly Conversation at the time of the Italian-born Mr. Cioni. “He writes poetry.”
Annie, who has one child with her partner, has also published her own collection of poetry, releasing The Good Dark in 2015.
The morning after Annie’s husband dropped Nancy off, 84-year-old Annie did not show up to church.
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos confirmed Monday that the home is being treated as a crime scene.
The next day, the Los Angeles Times reported that bloodstains and signs of forced entry were found at the scene.
On Tuesday, News Nation shared a video of what appears to be a trail of blood leading down Nancy’s front door.
Savannah is absent from “Today” as the FBI continues the frantic search for her mother, but on Monday she issued a statement wishing the “safe return” of her “precious” parents.
She has since asked her Instagram followers to pray for Nancy, and her husband, Michael Feldman, told Page Six on Tuesday that he had nothing “new to report.”
Notably, Savannah withdrew from hosting the Winter Olympics, which open in Italy on Friday.
The NBC personality and her brother Camron Guthrie have not been seen during the crisis, but Nanos acknowledged Tuesday that Nancy’s loved ones are “leaning on each other.”
The official told Us Weekly that the family was “very involved” and “very cooperative” with authorities.
Hours later, the sheriff appeared on CBS News and admitted that the purported ransom note sent to a local Arizona news station contained grisly details about Nancy’s home and the clothing she was wearing before her disappearance.
He believes Nancy, who was in dire need of medication, was abducted or abducted because she “has high blood pressure, a pacemaker, and heart problems,” as described in the 911 call audio, and was unable to “walk 50 yards” on her own.
