
Investigators searching for missing Arizona grandmother Nancy Guthrie have asked neighbors to review and turn over home surveillance video from two specific days in January that they now consider critical to the case.
According to a post on X by journalist Brian Entin, deputies have requested that residents near Guthrie's Catalina Foothills home look for any available security footage from Jan. 11 and Jan. 24.
Authorities are focusing on those dates to see whether anyone was scouting the neighborhood or making repeated trips past Guthrie's street. They are asking for clips that show vehicles, people on foot, or anything neighbors view as unusual on those days, according to People.
Guthrie, 84, was reported missing on Feb. 1 after family members discovered she was gone from her home, with her phone and other personal items left behind.
Investigators have said evidence inside the residence suggests she was taken against her will, and the case is being treated as a likely abduction involving homicide detectives and the FBI. A security camera that had been mounted near the front entry was also reported missing after she vanished.
Detectives have already collected and reviewed doorbell and other security videos from the surrounding area that captured vehicles traveling on nearby roads in the overnight hours around Guthrie's disappearance.
One clip described in earlier coverage showed a vehicle passing in the early morning close to the time Guthrie's medical device last communicated with her phone, but investigators have not publicly identified a suspect vehicle.
By adding Jan. 11 and Jan. 24 to their timeline, officials are trying to determine whether any of the same vehicles or individuals appear more than once, NBC News reported.
Local deputies are working with federal investigators to process digital evidence, pursue tips, and examine physical items recovered near Guthrie's neighborhood, including clothing and other objects sent for DNA testing.
Officials say the volume of forensic work means some results may take weeks, but they emphasize that the investigation remains active and that they believe they are "definitely closer" to answers.
As of mid‑March, there have been no arrests and no confirmed proof of life, and authorities continue to urge anyone with footage from Jan. 11 or Jan. 24, or with other information, to contact the Pima County Sheriff's Department or the FBI tip line, as per Fox News.
Originally published on Lawyer Herald