NBC News reported Tuesday that law enforcement officials are set to release a photo of a suspect in the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
Guthrie, the mother of “Today” host Savannah Guthrie, went missing on February 1st and is thought to have been abducted.
According to sources who spoke with NBC and Fox News, the image could be released as soon as this afternoon.
BREAKING UPDATE: FBI Releases Photos Of Suspect In Nancy Guthrie Case
Federal investigators are now sifting through a deep trove of digital data gathered from the Tucson home of Nancy Guthrie and nearby residences as the search for the missing mother of “Today” show anchor Savannah Guthrie enters a critical phase.
The FBI is analyzing information pulled from home security systems, smart devices, and other connected technology in the quiet Catalina Foothills neighborhood where the 84-year-old vanished overnight more than a week ago, Fox News Senior Correspondent Alicia Acuna reported.
The digital sweep comes as visible evidence at the home continues to raise troubling questions. Fox News Digital previously reported that a security camera mounted on the exterior of Guthrie’s home, as recently as Friday morning, had been removed from its wall bracket by Monday while investigators continued searching the property.
Even when cameras fail to capture video of a suspect, investigators can still extract what law enforcement refers to as “unseen data,” background information logged by devices that never triggers an alert to the homeowner.
Home security systems may not notify users when movement appears insignificant, but the technology can still record timestamps, motion patterns, and signal interruptions that help reconstruct a timeline, according to Kurt “CyberGuy” Knutsson.
“Cameras facing the Guthrie house right now show very little activity, but I promise you there’s an enormous amount of activity going on on the digital side,” Knutsson said.
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