The FBI has finally made what could be the breakthrough Americans have been waiting for in the disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie, mother of TODAY show co-host Savannah Guthrie. DNA recovered from a glove found near the victim's Tucson home represents the most significant development since the elderly woman vanished two weeks ago.
But here's what should alarm every American: Why did it take two weeks to find this evidence? And why isn't the Biden-era FBI bureaucracy treating this with the urgency it deserves?
The discovery comes as frustrated family members and local law enforcement have been doing the heavy lifting while federal agencies seem content to let this case drift into obscurity. This isn't some random missing person case - this involves the kidnapping of an elderly American citizen, potentially by dangerous criminals who remain on the loose.
Where's the Media Coverage?
While the legacy media obsesses over manufactured political drama, an 84-year-old grandmother remains missing and her family suffers in agonizing uncertainty. If this were the mother of a liberal media darling, you can bet every network would have wall-to-wall coverage and the FBI would have deployed every available resource.
The DNA evidence represents hope, but it also raises serious questions about the initial response. How was this glove overlooked for two weeks? What other evidence might still be sitting unprocessed while bureaucrats shuffle paperwork?
"Every hour counts when dealing with kidnapping cases involving elderly victims. The fact that we're just now finding crucial evidence suggests either incompetence or misplaced priorities," said one law enforcement expert familiar with the case.
President Trump's administration has made it clear that protecting American citizens is the top priority. Perhaps it's time for the Trump Justice Department to take a closer look at how the FBI is handling cases like this.
Nancy Guthrie's family deserves answers, and the American people deserve to know that our federal law enforcement agencies are actually working for us, not against us. Will this DNA evidence finally bring justice, or will it get buried in the same bureaucratic swamp that let this case languish for two weeks?
