Nancy Guthrie’s neighbors are reportedly being asked about Internet glitches around the time the 84-year-old woman went missing.
It’s not clear if investigators in Arizona believe there’s a link to possible technological issues in Tucson and Guthrie’s Feb. 1 disappearance.
Three of Guthrie’s neighbors were quizzed about their web connections by the Pima County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI, according to NBCs “TODAY,” where the missing woman’s daughter Savannah Guthrie is a host.
Investigators reportedly told locals that some neighbors reported Internet issues the night before the apparent abduction. Those quizzed Thursday by authorities going door to door said they would’ve been either asleep or not home at the time such glitches might have occurred.
An NBC News reported asked Pima County’s sheriff if the suspect in Guthrie’s disappearance may have had with him a WiFi jammer. They were told that investigators were looking at “every angle” of a brief surveillance video recovered from the missing woman’s damaged doorbell camera. Little evidence has been shared with the public aside from that clip showing an armed man approaching the home wearing masks and gloves.
Savannah Guthrie has been on leave throughout the investigation, but visited NBC’s studios Thursday to tell colleagues she expects to return to the morning program at some point.
She and her siblings are offering a $1 million reward to see their mother again. The 54-year-old TV personality conceded in a video posted to social media on Feb. 14 “she may already be gone.”