BREAKING! After 99Days, Nancy Guthrie Is Dead? Human Remains Finally Found As Police Just Announced-

The bone discovered by a civilian live-streamer in the Tucson desert is not Nancy Guthrie.

On May 7th, 2026, the investigation into the disappearance of the 84-year-old mother of Savannah Guthrie took a brief, viral detour into the dirt of the Catalina Foothills. A YouTuber from “AJW News,” broadcasting to thousands in real-time, stumbled upon what appeared to be a human bone just seven miles from Nancy’s home. Given that Nancy has been missing for over 100 days after a chilling 41-minute abduction window, the internet reacted with a collective, held breath.

The resolution, however, came from a department that does not investigate kidnappings.


The “Prehistoric” Determination

The Tucson Police Department and the Pima County Office of the Medical Examiner were joined at the scene by the University of Arizona’s anthropology department. Their presence was the first signal that this was not a forensic breakthrough for the Guthrie family.

TPD spokesperson James Horton released a statement that effectively closed the book on the discovery:

“The bone found near Crayoft and River was determined to be human. This will be a prehistoric anthropological investigation… This is not a criminal investigation.”

The word prehistoric is the autopsy of this lead. It confirms that the remains are at least 50 years old and likely date back centuries, belonging to a historical burial ground that existed long before the upscale residential grids of modern Tucson were laid down.


100 Days of Asymmetry

The reason a centuries-old bone could paralyze the true crime community for 24 hours is found in the frustrating lack of progress in the actual case. As of May 2026, the investigation remains a study in high-tech clues and zero names:

The Known Facts

The Victim: Nancy Guthrie, 84, requires a pacemaker and heart medication. She cannot walk 50 yards without assistance.

The Timeline: On February 1st, at 1:47 a.m., her Google Nest camera was manually covered and disconnected. By 2:28 a.m., her pacemaker lost its Bluetooth connection to her phone, indicating she had been moved away from the house.

The Evidence: A masked figure (5’9″ to 5’10”) was caught on residual cloud data wearing a 25L Ozark Trail backpack. Mixed DNA and blood were found at the scene.

The Institutional Friction

The case is being hampered by an increasingly public feud between Sheriff Chris Nanos and the FBI. While Director Cash Patel has criticized the local handling of DNA evidence, Nanos has been accused by his own union of obstructing federal help due to decades-old personal grudges.

The discovery of the bone highlighted the growing role of “citizen journalists” in this vacuum of information. While AJW News followed protocol by calling the police, other streamers have faced allegations of trespassing and harassment in Nancy’s neighborhood, forcing the department to increase patrols just to manage the looky-loos.


The Search Continues

For the Guthrie family—including Savannah and her brother, a retired Air Force colonel—the May 7th discovery was another emotional whiplash in a series of many. They continue to appeal directly to the kidnapper, offering a $1.2 million reward and pleading for a “proof of life.”

The bone found in the desert belongs to an ancient story of the Tucson landscape. Nancy Guthrie’s story, however, remains trapped in the present—unresolved, increasingly tense, and still waiting for a name to match the mask.

What do you think is the primary reason the Pima County Sheriff’s Department has been so resistant to federal oversight in this case?