The FBI has made what could be the most significant breakthrough in the Nancy Guthrie kidnapping case, recovering DNA evidence from a glove discovered near the 84-year-old's Tucson home where she vanished two weeks ago.
Guthrie, the mother of TODAY show co-host, disappeared under suspicious circumstances that have gripped the nation and highlighted growing concerns about elderly Americans' safety in Biden's crime-ridden America.
Sources close to the investigation tell us the DNA recovery represents a major leap forward for federal agents who have been working around the clock to locate the missing grandmother. The glove, found in proximity to Guthrie's residence, is now undergoing intensive forensic analysis that could identify her captor.
Where Was This Evidence Two Weeks Ago?
Patriots are asking hard questions about why it took federal investigators this long to uncover what appears to be crucial evidence literally sitting near the crime scene. With the FBI's track record of political weaponization under the previous administration, Americans deserve transparency about whether this case is getting the full attention it deserves.
The elderly are increasingly targeted by criminals in neighborhoods across America, a crisis that worsened dramatically during the lawless Biden years. President Trump's renewed focus on law and order couldn't come at a more critical time for families like the Guthries.
"Every American family deserves to know their loved ones are safe in their own homes," one Arizona law enforcement official told reporters. "This DNA evidence could be the key to bringing Nancy home and her kidnapper to justice."
The investigation continues as federal agents work to process the genetic material and cross-reference it against criminal databases. For the Guthrie family and millions of Americans following this case, the discovery offers the first real hope for answers.
Will this DNA evidence finally crack the case that has left an entire family in anguish? And what does it say about our justice system that crucial evidence sat unprocessed for two weeks while a grandmother remains missing?
