Phil Holloway and experts dissect the Nancy Guthrie kidnapping, detailing black gloves found near her home and a suspicious man with two backpacks seen on February 1st. While Carlos Patel was detained via cell data, forensic teams analyze bloodstains under a tent to estimate the abductor's height, noting gear suggests an amateur rather than professional operation. Despite Bitcoin ransom demands and blockchain reversals, no arrest has occurred after 12 days, raising fears that Nancy may have died earlier despite her pacemaker's lack of signal. The investigation faces skepticism over fragmented agency coordination and potential family financial motives, leaving the public to await definitive answers on whether this is an opportunist crime or part of a larger syndicate. [Automatically generated summary]
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, live on Sirius XM channel 111 every weekday at New East.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly.
Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show.
We are on the road, having a little President's Day holiday with the fam, but obviously we weren't going to not do the show.
Especially given how busy the news time has been in this case and this story have been for all of us.
So we've got all of our all-stars with us today, and we're going to kick it off with Phil Holloway.
We've had a lot of developments since yesterday.
We're going to get to some of them with Phil, who is live in Tucson, right by Nancy Guthrie's house.
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Annie's Disappearance Route00:15:28
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Phil, good to see you.
So, I think the biggest thing that's happened since we last saw you is the tent this morning over the outside of Nancy Guthrie's home.
Can you just tell us about that and then we'll get into the search around the gloves?
Yeah, I had to drive over there and look at it just to see it with my own eyes.
And, you know, look, it's the kind of thing that I would have expected to see to protect that scene like early on in the investigation.
But they put it up, they went inside, and it looks like they were doing some technical video work, which I believe was designed to maybe get precise height measurements for the perpetrator that we see on the pictures and on the video.
And then they took it down as soon as they left.
So it went up, they did some work, technical work.
Looks like they had some videography equipment as well.
Maybe they're doing a like a crime scene recreation or a video of some type inside there.
And then they took it down and they left.
So, yeah, that was just one of the very interesting and I would say maybe odd things, but I'm sure there's a good explanation for it once we learn what that is.
But there are some other things that are going on that are, I think, a little bit peculiar.
Yeah, well, tell us what they are, what they are.
All right.
So in the middle of the night, around 2.15 in the morning here in Tucson, the sheriff's forensic folks go out and they search this area just off the side of the roadway, very close to where I'm sitting right now, but also very close to Nancy Guthrie's home.
Now, I went back out there today in the daylight and I took my own video and I looked around.
And, you know, I think that if you're looking for something, and by the way, this is not that far from where they found the gloves yesterday.
But if you're looking for something, I would say go in the daylight, you know, rather than go out with flashlights.
But you're telling me they went at 2.15 a.m. to the spot searching?
Yeah.
And so it's the kind of place where you would look if like you can pull out of Nancy's home, right?
And you just head back towards Tucson.
And that could be the way that you go.
It's just one of the expected routes of egress from there, right?
And so if you found gloves just down the road, it makes sense to search other areas on that road.
So that much I get, but I just don't understand why they do it in the dark with flashlights because I was able to go out there in the broad daylight and I could see very well.
I mean, there was a board for the viewing audience.
You can see Nancy's home is labeled in red at the top of our little map.
And then the early AM search happened in the middle there.
And then down below the early AM search is where they found those gloves yesterday, which we haven't hit exactly, but people have likely heard about it.
Last night, the New York Post happened to be with law enforcement when they found, now we're told it was a pair of black gloves.
At first, the report was it's one glove.
And now it's since been confirmed they found a pair.
They're not describing them as identical to what they believe the perpetrator here was wearing, but they do look similar.
But everyone's quick to point out, Phil, that it's the desert and you really can't function at all in the desert if you're doing any sort of pruning or gardening or cleanup even without gloves or you're going to walk away pretty bloody.
So we have no idea whether these gloves have any relation to the Nancy Guthrie case, but the cops have them and they're being analyzed now.
Yes.
Yep.
That's my understanding.
I think there's a possibility they could be connected.
And let me explain why.
I've been able to develop a source or two of my own in the short time that I've been here, some people that I've talked to.
And, you know, it is believed that the perpetrator had a phone in his pocket when you see him in those videos and in the photos at the doorway at the nest camera.
And so a telephone, a cell phone, even if it's turned off, there's ways to track that.
And so I believe that the searches that we've seen in the area of both Nancy's home yesterday and higher up in the foothills, all along this Campbell Road, which is where I was this morning, and even over by Annie Guthrie's house, I believe they are sort of following a perceived or believed route of travel following a device.
And specifically, one of a neighbor over at Annie's neighborhood didn't want to be interviewed on camera, but told me that the FBI had been at her house and that one of the things they were looking for, among other things, was a cell phone.
Okay.
So I'm putting all this together and there's obviously missing pieces, but what it's starting to paint the picture of for me, at least, is the law enforcement officers believe that they have a general route of travel and they are searching more specifically now along where that phone might have traveled, either going to or from Nancy Guthrie's home.
I mean, if that's true, Phil, that's huge.
I mean, if they actually have a cell phone now associated potentially with this crime, then we may be hours away from an arrest.
Like how long would it take them to figure out who owns the cell phone?
Well, that's a good question that I'm not a cell phone expert.
I can just tell you what the sources have told me that that's one thing the FBI was trying to find.
And if it's a burner, it may take more time.
But if it's actually registered to somebody, then yeah, they could very easily have a name.
So the FBI just is holding these cards very close to the vest.
But if there is a cell phone, and I believe there is, and I believe that's the source of a lot of these new searches, that's what's driving this.
It's driving the location of where you see the FBI fanning out, searching all around Annie's house a couple of days ago.
And so they put all this together, and I believe that they are working off that sort of a presumption, and they're trying to track down where that phone came and went.
So you're saying your information is based on your sources that they have identified a cell phone that they think may be attached to this crime and that they're figuring it out thanks to the cell towers, possible the route, the possible route that this person took on the night in question and going and searching.
And that's what's explaining these overnight searches because this isn't the first overnight search we've had.
We've had a couple of these.
Yeah.
And remember, the phones talk to towers, but they also talk to every Wi-Fi router.
If you go down any neighborhood and you look on your phone and you see the list of available networks, you may not be joining those networks, but your phone is communicating with those routers.
And so there is a digital footprint that is left behind by the phone everywhere it goes.
They looked, I would say around Annie's house, I would say that was probably maybe a half mile radius, if I had to guess, based on what I saw.
And I went to the house and I drove all around when the FBI was out there and I was seeing these teams of agents and there was some sheriff's deputies out there too, blocks and blocks away.
So they were literally fanning out in a large area, which would be consistent with maybe a ping off of a cell phone tower that you can't, maybe you can't triangulate it and get a more precise location.
But, you know, it seemed to be a pretty large area they were searching, including people's yards, the neighbors' yards.
They were looking for any items of relevance.
But if that's what explains the activity over at Annie and Tomas's house, then that's even more interesting that a phone, if it's true, that a phone that police think may have been associated with this crime went back into the Annie and Tomas neighborhood.
That's interesting as an investigative matter.
And it's also explanatory of why they keep going back over there and canvassing neighbors and so on.
And so you're saying you believe that too is based on your sourcing from one presumes people in a position to know on them having a possible phone lead.
Yeah.
And look, the fact that, you know, you just have to look at the facts.
I mean, the investigation is clearly focusing on two general places, the area around Nancy's home and the area around Annie's home.
And so the fact that the investigation keeps taking officers to those places, you know, it doesn't take a genius to understand that that's where they think they're going to find evidence.
And so they're not there on accident.
They weren't out here at 2.15 in the morning by accident either.
They were looking for something specific because it wasn't a large search area.
They literally went to like this one intersection right where I was.
And you showed the video.
It's not a big area.
So they had a specific place that they were going to, and it was for some reason.
We just don't know what it was.
It wasn't an accident, though.
And that's two, well, two times that they've done something in the middle of the night or in the cover of darkness that easily could have been done during the daytime hours.
And we just don't know why.
Why was this search done at 2:15 a.m.?
Why did they go to Annie and Tomas's house at 7:30 to 10:30 p.m. when it was dark and not turn on the lights and take photographs inside?
I mean, it's just all so bizarre to us.
Okay, I want to ask you about now this alert that the sheriff just sent out saying he's asking for more video.
He's asking for the locals, the residents in Nancy's neighborhood, to do what exactly, Phil.
So he's they're using people who have, I guess, the ring system, and there's a way to send out alerts asking people for video at certain dates and certain times.
And some of these go back into, as I understand it, January and multiple times prior to the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
So the question then, obviously, is what's what's special about those dates?
And they're not obviously telling us the reason they're focusing on those dates.
But if I had to guess, I had to hypothesize, one hypothesis would be they might be checking to see who has delivered maybe an Amazon package to that area.
You know, it's not hard to go on somebody's Amazon history and see when they've had things delivered, right?
And so they might be trying to identify individuals who were in that area, in that neighborhood, making some type of delivery.
We've already seen one person who's a known delivery driver that was taken in for questioning and released.
Yeah.
Poor Carlos.
Well, because there's two communications from the sheriff's office.
One is actually from the sheriff's office and one allegedly isn't.
The one that just came out from the Pima County Sheriff says, We want everything for the last month from January 1st to February 2nd.
We want everything you have.
Scour your ring cameras and your nest cameras and let us know if you see anything suspicious whatsoever to all the people in the area.
And that definitely came from the sheriff and he just put it out.
But then there was an earlier report that was circulated on the neighborhood like ring camera watch chat that you're referring to.
And that refers to two separate dates on which the sheriff allegedly wants data.
The sheriff's office is saying that we didn't give that, though that ring camera like discussion, there's a screen grab of it that the neighbors posted, one of them online, and it does show a sheriff's seal and seems to come from the Pima County Sheriff, though the sheriff's office is officially denying that for some reason.
It could just be that the sheriff went to, you know, people from the deputies had gone to neighbors and said, we want footage from January 11th between 9 p.m. and midnight.
Okay, that's weird, right?
January 11th, as far as we know, has nothing to do with this crime, but they know more than we do.
And then we also want January 31st, which is the Saturday that Nancy disappeared.
It's the morning, the morning before she disappeared from 9:30 in the morning to 11 a.m.
So Nancy was alive and well then, saying we believe there may have been a quote suspicious vehicle on Via Entrada around 10 a.m.
Again, this is these are they style it in this separate ring camera discussion group as quote new timeline for Nancy video requests.
And they say it's from the sheriff.
Again, the sheriff says that's not from him, but there's definitely an actual post suggesting that the locals believe they've been asked by the sheriff for those two dates in particular.
And we know for a fact they've been asked for all 30 days prior to and around the actual disappearance.
I mean, they're basically crowdsourcing the solution to this crime at this point, Phil.
Yeah, and it tracks with maybe a neighbor, and they've been talking to all the neighbors.
It tracks with a neighbor saying to somebody, the sheriff or the FBI, saying that on January 31st, there was maybe some suspicious vehicle in the area.
And so now that the sheriff has that information given by a neighbor, the sheriff's trying to identify that vehicle and determine if, in fact, it was suspicious or if they can rule it out.
But it seems like they're following up on specific leads that they are given by the people that they are interviewing, which are the people in that area.
It's very smart because look at the cases that we know about.
You know, it's like Koberger cased that home repeatedly before he committed the crime in question.
And also after.
We know he went back the morning that he committed the crime in Idaho.
It was four in the morning between 4 and 4.20.
And he was back there by 9, 9.30 that next morning, five hours after he'd committed the murders to look at it.
Maybe he realized he left behind evidence.
And so the sheriff's smart to include the 36 hours after this crime for suspicious vehicles.
But the odds that this guy just did this cold and never once drove by the house are very small.
So this makes sense to me.
And hopefully some homeowner nearby has got it, paid for the recording service on the nest or the ring, and he's got it.
Phil, thank you so much for traveling out to Tucson and all your good reporting this week.
Really appreciate it.
Oh, you bet.
Happy to be here anytime.
Window Treatment Clues00:02:11
We'll be discussing this on MK True.
Good.
Yes, on MK True Crime, and we will be tuning in for that.
Absolutely.
100%.
Please do.
And I know I heard Matt Murphy over on our friend Ashley Banfield's podcast yesterday.
He's awesome too and part of MK True Crime.
A lot of really smart, smart lawyers, former cops, prosecutors, criminal defense attorneys discussing this case over there.
I want to bring in our super duper panel, Jim Fitzgerald, Fitz, and Maureen O'Connell.
They, of course, as you know by now, have, I think, 50 years between them at the FBI, now no longer with the FBI, but full of information.
And we're going to do that right after this break.
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Criminal Activity Evidence00:15:34
Or it's not blind to the drug, coconut, or miudo, but We
are remote from a lovely location where I'm supposed to be on a few days' RR, but that's not what's happening because we have got to stay on this story and on the news for all of you.
And doing overtime duty for us, as they have been now for weeks, Jim Fitzgerald and Maureen O'Connell, both of whom are 25-plus-year veterans at the FBI.
So, let me kick it off here with you guys.
This morning, when I woke up in the wee hours to catch my flight, all over X was this other new video.
And this other new video shows a man in an alley, reportedly on February 1st.
Nancy was taken overnight from January 31st into February 1st, which was Sunday.
Shows a man in a back alley.
We're showing it now.
And he is wearing a backpack.
He's got another backpack in his hands.
He's got a gray jacket on.
The pants are sort of like blue pants, not jeans, but pants.
He is trying to, I can't even tell.
I mean, I'm going to ask you guys what you think, but I see him maybe trying to open a gate or do something with the backpack, maybe push it over the gate.
I can't tell, but it doesn't seem to work because he then takes that second backpack back down and walks back to where he came from.
And now TMZ is reporting that the FBI has got this video.
Of course, people are crediting TMZ with breaking this video, which is not correct.
It was all over X this morning.
And I think it was, hold on a second because I have it.
I'll find it.
It was an ex-like true crime solver who's been all over this case.
It was not TMZ.
In any event, I want to give him credit and I'll get that out of my packet in just one second.
And so now there's a real question, guys, about whether that's our guy.
He, to me, I'll just kick it off.
He looks skinnier than I would have expected.
And I can't quite tell whether he has facial hair.
He might.
He doesn't have it all over his face, that's for sure, but he might have it like in the front where we saw it in that mask.
And I can't tell whether those backpacks are identical or not.
But clearly, the guy's he loves backpacks.
And I don't know.
He seems to be up to no good here in the middle of the night, not far.
This is about five miles away from Nancy Guthrie's house, and it's on the night in question.
So, you know, that's pretty telling.
Yeah, here's the guy.
His name is Nerdy Addict, nerdy addict, who is a very good ex-follow, and he is the one who posted this, saying it was originally posted on the Ring Neighbors app, which is full of information in the early morning hours of February 1st, five miles south of Nancy's home.
And he did report that it had been submitted to the FBI.
Then Harvey Levin adds the FBI is taking it seriously.
So, your thoughts on that.
Maureen, I'll start with you.
First and foremost, we can expect the FBI's ERT team to be showing up at that location to conduct a comprehensive search.
I think we can all agree on that.
Secondly, if he had, I agree, those jeans are looser than in the videos we have of the actual offender on Nancy's front porch.
Let's call him the gunslinger.
So the gunslinger had on tighter jeans and he could have had, he could have had those skinny jeans on over these pants.
He now has two backpacks, whereas at Nancy's, he only had one.
Maybe the other one was in his vehicle, his getaway car, whatever.
But actually, when I'm looking at these pants now, they don't look that dissimilar.
For some reason, I thought they were a little bit more fitted.
Well, it could be the color too.
Yeah, well, the color, they're going to be able to do a color enhancement.
The Bureau will, based on known colors at that location and how they're showing up on that nest camera that Nancy had.
They're going to be able to do a little bit of something, not sure what.
I think he has this guy looks to have what I would say is a gun in his right pocket.
If you watch the way that pocket moves to the guys approaching, and there's one photo I actually did a still shot.
We're talking about double backpack man.
Double backpack man.
Yep.
Let's call him Pac-Man.
No, I'm only kidding.
Whatever you want.
But if you look at, if you look at Pac-Man in this photo, when he's putting, when he's putting something in the trash.
Wait, I'm going the wrong way.
What am I going to do?
I have to go the other way.
Right there.
You had it.
Right there.
Right there.
If you watch this when it's moving, you'll see the movement.
You'll see the weight of the gun apparently, apparently at the bottom of that pocket.
And it's as if the gun is laying like laying in full in that pocket.
See how you can see?
Yeah, you can see this.
There's definitely something weighty in his right pocket.
Right.
He's also got something in his right pocket, like a phone.
And it looks like I can't see that much.
Can I just say something quickly?
Look at his, forgive me.
Look at his rear end.
He looks kind of skinny.
Look at his legs.
He looks kind of skinny.
And can we see our actual abductor video now?
Because he did not look skinny to me.
Now, you did, you raised the point of maybe the guy by the time he gets to Nancy's or when this guy.
Look at this.
Don't you think this guy's rear end and legs are thicker than Pac-Man?
What do you think, Fitz?
Well, the FBI has had this for at least 24 hours or more.
I'm not sure exactly when it became available to them.
They have all kinds of technical enhancement capabilities that, of course, we don't have here.
Megan, you may have some on your staff, but they're going to have as much as they can to blow that thing up and look at it in every single step of the way.
Also, I'd want to make sure it's confirmed the time and the location.
We can't do anything about that, but we'll assume for now that the location and the time is consistent with the Guthrie neighborhood and, of course, the night of the abduction.
So yeah, there's a lot here.
I mean, we talked before in the last week or so.
None of us really believe in coincidences, certainly in terms of criminal activity, violent criminal activity.
But this would be a coincidence on steroids, if in fact, somehow it's not related.
So this guy absolutely positively has to be ruled out, identified.
If he's just some local yokel, you know, dumpster diving, looking for valuables or food or something, he should come forward to save everybody a lot of aggravation.
But if he is, in fact, the abductor, or let's not rule out, you know, a partner of the abductor, you know, switching backpacks and one carries a gun one time, one carries a gun the other.
And I'm not locking into two people for this part of it, but nonetheless, they have to identify this guy.
And if he's doing nothing wrong, except prowling around some neighborhoods when he shouldn't, the police would probably know of this guy, the sheriff's department.
If he's just a random guy that does those every once in a while, maybe homeless, lives under a cactus somewhere off the grid, they're going to know about this guy and they're going to identify him.
And they're going to have now facial recognition, which this guy is going to be a lot better possibility because you have his whole face.
He's like some facial growth on his face.
They're going to do some work with that.
And I'm assuming this guy will be identified.
Let's hope he's tied into solving this case.
Let's hope he's tied into the person at Nancy's house.
And we could really then start moving forward in that condition.
When you say it, it sounds so exactly right.
Think about it.
I mean, Maureen, what are the odds that there were two men wearing very similar clothing with a backpack packed to the brink within five miles of Nancy Guthrie's house on the night she was abducted, both of whom appear to have been carrying and appear to have been right-handed.
And this guy's, we think he's got the little facial hair.
He's got the big round head.
He also appears in one of the shots I looked to have stick out ears.
His head is perfectly round.
There's not a lot of hair.
You know, we talked about that, how you could see in the abductor's video, his head looks perfectly round.
So he either didn't have like a bunch of hair that was mussing it up or maybe was bald.
Yeah, here you can kind of see it.
You can kind of see that his ear was more prominent on the right side.
So what are the odds of there being two of them on the night in question within five miles of each other and within hours of one another?
Astronomical.
And then you have to ask yourself, why five miles away?
Is that where he lives?
Is that where they're keeping Nancy?
Because in that kidnapping case where I told you we recovered the child alive, he had been staying at a home several miles away from the location he was taken from, and he was being cared for by a family that was being paid to care for him while all the negotiations were going on with the ransom.
So it's possible.
It's possible.
I mean, when you guys watch that video, do you have any idea what he's doing?
Like, that's one of my questions is: what the hell is he doing with that backpack?
He's very focused on the one bass pack and like trying to shove it over this fence or put it some.
I don't know what he's doing.
You tell me what you could glean from watching this.
Yeah, I've chased down the burglars back in the day and bank burglars, residential burglars, others.
And, you know, some of them, like a good kidnapper, like a good abductor, they're going to have a protocol set up and an MO, a modus operandi that gets them in the door and out the door.
They may have materials with them.
In the old days, you find a guy carrying a bunch of, you know, several pillowcases with him.
Well, guess what?
He's not looking to buy a pillow and take a nap.
He has that to put material inside there.
They may get the pillowcase from the house, quite frankly, but they also could bring a trash bag or something.
So, yeah, both these guys seem to have, I kid it the other day on the air, almost like they're carrying parachutes.
Of course, it's not that, but they look like they're stuffed to the brim, some kind of canvas material, tarp, of course, tools we talked about the other day.
It looks like this is their kit.
Is it a burglar kit, abduction kit, rape, murder, kidnap?
We don't know, but it's a kit for a criminal activity against a human being.
So what's in that kit is going to be very valuable.
Change of clothes, change of hoods that we don't see on this guy on these newer video.
And it's his kit to get him successfully to commit that crime.
And we get that kit and find out.
And this last guy we're just seeing, he has two different bags, it seems.
And then the video from the offender at one point, and Megan, you pointed this out, there's no bag in one of the pictures.
So are these things like interchangeable?
They put them down.
One has one purpose, one has another.
When they're first casing the place, you know, they don't have a bag at all to look suspicious in case someone sees them.
That discussion that we had yesterday about this picture has been haunting me.
So for the listening audience, we're showing the picture of the abductor right underneath the archway at Nancy's house where he's not wearing the backpack.
We don't see the gun and the whole face mask looks like he has it on backwards.
You can't see eyes.
You can't see a mouth.
Could just be the camera not able to focus on him quite yet because he's not close enough, but you can't see any of that.
And all I've been thinking about over the past night is that, what if that was, and it seems like it would have to have been after the crime, because I feel like we see him arrive to commit the crime when he steps onto her property.
He's got his flashlight in.
He steps up on that little step.
He seems to know it's coming.
He's, he sees the Nest Cam.
He's like, okay, I got to deal with that.
He does the vegetation.
You know, I, if, if the shot of him without the backpack was recon, his recon wasn't very good.
So this is we're showing him now arriving with the head down and his little mouth cam mouth flashlight going.
But my thought was simply, if that's him post-crime, without the backpack and without the gun, and now we know Nancy's not in the house any longer, it doesn't, it's not good.
I mean, he, he should still need his gun.
He should still be afraid that Nancy's going to get out of that car and run, that he's got a live person in his car.
Like there's no time.
I don't know.
Do you have any thoughts on whether that makes it more or less likely?
Like, should I have the opposite analysis?
No, that's got to be him scouting it out in advance because post-crime, we know this person, whoever it was, had Nancy.
Well, he's going to need the flashlight when he goes into the house.
The house is pitch dark.
You're not going to turn the lights on within the house because anyone driving by, even though you can't see much, you would be able to see if the lights were on inside Nancy's house at two o'clock in the morning.
And that would be concerning, especially if you're a friend that knows that her bedroom is all the way in the back or wherever it is.
So he's got to have the flashlight when he's trying to go in.
He also has to have the flashlight when he's going up to try to check the doorknob, because you'll notice that that video stops right before he would try to gain entry there.
I mean, what if this dude had a key and went in the front door?
We don't know because the video was stopped then.
Do we not have the video?
That's probably the video that law enforcement is holding back from this.
They totally have it, Maureen, because they we saw him deal with the camera.
I think I feel like we know what he did with the camera.
Here, he settled on, I'm going to cover it with flowers, right?
He didn't appear to keep trying to get it off.
It appears, I don't know what happened next, but I think you're right.
I think law enforcement has probably got video of him either entering this front door or abandoning it and going out that path and then winding up around the back.
Because the plan was to drag her out the front door.
That was the plan.
He couldn't get in the front door, or maybe he did with a key or something, but you're not going to get past that burglar door and that really thick wooden Spanish style front door that they have.
I can't even look at a door like that without my hips hurting to this day.
And Fitz will tell you the same thing.
But the one in the back would be easy to break in.
It's a thinner door.
It's got nine small square panes of glass.
You can either punch a hole in, which someone did not do that, or you just boot the door down or boot it in.
Forced Entry Tactics00:15:42
And that's if I don't know why they're not answering the question.
Was this forced entry or was it not forced entry?
But if it was forced entry, it had to be from the back because Ashley Vanfield is reporting that it was.
So far, all of what she reported in her big scoop on the Tuesday after Nancy went missing has proven out.
She said they were nest cameras.
Everybody else had just been assuming ring.
Guess what?
They turned out to be nest cameras.
She said that there was a camera in the front and the back.
That we don't know for sure, but I felt like the sheriff said they.
He referred to plural.
We don't have them.
So that seems to suggest.
He also hasn't denied most of her reporting.
Like he hasn't said the forced entry.
He said, I don't know where you got that from.
We didn't say that.
We didn't say that.
That's not a denial.
So there could have been a forced entry.
Ashley did report it was a forced entry from the back door and that the back door was left open.
And that's how the family found it when they showed up.
So TMZ is also reporting now something interesting about that timeline.
So it was 1.47 a.m. that the doorbell camera went offline, according to them.
But it was 2.12 a.m. that either some remnant of a camera or some different camera reported an image of a person had appeared.
And the cop was sure to say the sheriff said, it could have been actually an image of an animal, but it detected something.
It detected an image at 2.12.
And we spent days confused about how was it detecting images of people or anything after it was already disabled or disconnected at 1.47 a.m.
And they ultimately explained there was another camera.
Now, TMZ is reporting that it was at 2.12 a.m. that we are seeing the intruder video, that that video is from 2.12 a.m.
Now, we haven't independently confirmed that.
But I'm more confused than ever.
Like, well, then what happened at 1.47?
The doorbell camera went offline.
And yet at 2.12, we see this.
So was it the back doorbell candle camera that went offline at 1.47?
And there he is at 2.12.
Why wouldn't he just be in the back?
None of it makes sense.
And I guess it's not going to until law enforcement explains it to us.
Co-conspirator driver.
No, because he had the backpack on.
The guy in the intruder video had the backpack on.
But they continued something like a Nextel, a walkie-talkie.
It's the guy, the getaway driver and the kidnapper.
Yeah.
And I don't want to give these one or more people too much more credit than they deserve.
But I'm obviously the abduction part has been successful up to this point in time.
Although obviously some mistakes now and shortness and a lack of professionalism in terms of their overall activity.
But Megan, yeah, this could be pre-offense.
We see the person walking up doing a quick reconnoiter without all the equipment on except the mask to be sure.
And maybe even backwards, you could probably still see through it, depending on what kind of ambient light is there.
I know there's not much.
And they're just looking around real quick.
Or also, it could have been after Nancy is safely in the car.
She's restrained well enough, perhaps being watched by someone else.
And this person, I've seen burglars, I've interviewed burglars after the fact that they would come back to the scene if they've had even 10 minutes or 20 minutes in a residence or a business.
And they'd look around one more time, left no tools, no gloves.
You know, this is even before DNA analysis when I was doing some of these, but they wanted to make sure they left nothing behind at the scene.
So here he could be coming up one more time, backpacks in the car, gun, everything else, looks around.
All right, it's good.
Let's get out of here.
That could explain, it really explains the beforehand, him walking up and afterwards without the backpack.
Something else that happened is they found gloves.
Okay, we talked about that with Phil Holloway before you guys got here.
They found a pair of gloves and everybody says, okay, it's the desert.
You're going to see gloves.
But it is kind of interesting that it's in exactly the right place.
It's not too far away from Nancy's house.
And the gloves, they're not in the middle of like an area people prune from the look of it.
It's like roadside.
It almost has the feel of somebody driving away and chucking things out the window.
And then sure enough, we know that the police went back.
They found these yesterday evening in the daylight hours.
Clearly, the sun had not set.
You can see that in the video because the New York Post happened to be traveling with them.
And they go back at 2:15 in the morning, not to that exact spot, guys, but not too far from there.
I'm just judging from the map my team made, maybe half an hour, half a mile farther south to search in the darkness.
So what's that about?
I don't understand searching in the darkness.
And I've done a million of these searches, but Fitz, go ahead.
Now, I was able to say, and Maureen, you've been on these kind of task forces.
At some point, they start working around the clock.
And you have three different shifts, maybe two different shifts, 12 hours each.
Some kind of a lead comes in at midnight.
A couple of agents look at each other.
The boss says, Yeah, sure, go out.
And maybe just something as inconsequential as that.
I don't mean the evidence is inconsequential or what they found, but it could be, hey, guys, we're just sitting here.
The calls aren't coming in at whatever time it is.
Let's go out with our flashlights, put up some floodlights maybe and search this particular area.
And I'm not sure if that's exactly when they found these gloves or they were looking for something else at that point.
And there's also a reflective bag, as we noticed, Megan and Maureen.
And maybe just shining a flashlight across some of this wide depth and breadth alongside these roadways, you'd get a reflection that you wouldn't normally necessarily pick up in the daylight with a backpack that may blend in with the flora, the vegetation, et cetera.
So I don't want to put too much into the time of night that the agents were out there, except, hey, nothing else is happening.
I've covered my leads.
Let's go take a ride and look at some of these things.
And someone picks up what they're doing.
They also may want to avoid the media knowing what they're doing, but of course someone saw them.
And there's no avoiding us.
Yeah, that's excellent point on the reflective material on that backpack, Fitz, because you, first of all, that backpackpack, if it's gray, you're not even going to see it when you're out there walking.
It's going to be really hard.
It's super bright sunlight and everything is just those light camo colors and that great backpack would fall right into it.
But with regard, if I could for a moment on those gloves, I think the idea with the gloves is just, I'm just so excited about this piece of evidence for a number of reasons.
Number one, it's going to have the guy's DNA on it.
There's no way it's not going to.
Secondly, if he put those gloves on while he was in his car before they got out to conduct this crime that they committed, and they put their hand in the door handle to open it, they could almost superimpose fingerprints that were on that door handle onto the glove and then transfer them onto some surface within the property or on the doors or on that housing of the Nest camera.
Would that still be here all this time later, Maureen?
11, 10, 11 days later?
Yes, absolutely.
Oh, wow.
Really?
You're confident.
Yeah.
Great.
Could he be that dumb to throw the things out the window?
Well, my guess was when I first heard it, he stopped to go to the bathroom and he took the gloves off and may have tried to put them in his pocket.
And it was pitch black and he didn't realize it.
And they just fell to the ground while he was urinating.
And at this point, you're not foreseeing the entire country bearing down on your crime and the amount of searching and resources and 100 FBI agents or however many it is.
You know, you're not thinking like this is a dumb move to leave these gloves here.
I'm off the crime scene at least.
And before big op, you always, either before or after, you want to go to the washroom, right?
Bits, especially as a guy.
Yeah yeah, that's absolutely true.
Or have the, have the stuff in the bottle to clean your hands.
But yeah, I mean, of course, maybe within a 20 feet, 20 foot radius of those gloves, pick up some of the soil and look for any dna material in there.
I mean, we can probably find animal dna, but also and I think your earlier uh guest before us uh Megan suggested, besides his own dna on it or fingerprints, we could also have the dna of uh, of Nancy Guthri.
So, and that would certainly tie the gloves in directly to the crime.
And what we have to hope here too is that perhaps this guy is in Codis, that's the, the national Dna database that they can run.
So if there is dna found, they want to, they could, they could possibly come up with a name and address, conceivably right away, but he has to be in there for some sort of prior crime.
That would, in fact, uh law permits his dna to be put in.
There is uh, you know, his write-up, so to speak.
So uh, there's a lot that can come from those gloves.
It may come back to someone's dna in Codis who has nothing to do with the crime, and we all have to be prepared for that.
But, just like the guy, the other guy double backpack guy we're calling him and these gloves, they all have to be worked to their logical conclusion until investigators can absolutely rule them out that they have nothing to do with Nancy.
How long would it take to get the Dna test back on those gloves which they found yesterday afternoon, like around four or five in the evening?
The turnaround can be as fast as 24 48 hours, especially with access to the FBI lab.
They've got um, they've got a bunch of 10 pound brains there on scene.
But they can also ship it right back.
Uh, have two agents jump on a flight and bring it right back to the lab.
So they're gonna, they're gonna, they're gonna get it, get it done very, very quickly.
It would also be a little bit of a bonus if they could find some of that crushed foliage from the front porch with a little bit of blood from the guy's shoes right there next to those gloves.
And keep in mind you know we've been discussing loosely in this past hour like did he have an accomplice driving the car, watching Nancy helping him with the disposal of some of the materials.
Don't forget Cash.
Patel did say on Hannity two nights ago.
Persons of interest, we have persons plural.
He's not dumb he, he understands to make it plural.
It means something than to just say we have a person old Carlos um, so you know query who else he's looking at there.
By the way, on the Carlos thing, there was reporting that explained some of why they got to him.
Um, Nerdy addict.
Nerdy Addict who was the one who posted that video of Pac-man.
Um, he reported that Carlos was detained based on cell phone usage data and traffic analysis, which would make sense because Carlos said they didn't even interview me.
When they approached me, they they put cuffs on me.
I sat there for two hours.
They searched my home, they took my phone, they took my mother-in-law's phone, they took my wife's phone, they took my kids' phones and then they left and um, they battered their way into my house and they caused some damage.
My wrists hurt, but he, he said they didn't even interview him and, as you know, later the FBI said his alibi, Alibi checked out, reportedly said.
So that would make some sense if they were going off of cell phone usage data and traffic analysis.
We know he was a DoorDash delivery driver.
Maybe they spotted him.
Yeah, he was in the air.
He's going up and down that block.
He may have parked in the area behind him for a few minutes.
And they were.
Sorry about that.
No, I can hear you.
I got you.
You know, he may have, his movements must have been suspicious.
And then when they get their hands on his phone, they know easily within an hour where he was on the night in question during the hours in question, right?
That doesn't take the FBI long to run down.
Not at all.
And let me, I'm sure there's a number of defense attorneys in the area reaching out to Carlos.
We're going to sue the government for you.
And Megan, as a lawyer, you know this.
There's such a thing as known as exigent circumstances.
And I've learned that in a few different law enforcement academies.
I'm not a lawyer, but it's very, very rare that that can actually come into play here.
And I think a kidnapped person who may be, you know, conceivably dying without medication or heart, anything to do with her heart problem, those kind of factors can kick in where Miranda warnings can be put aside and emergency searches can be done like we're done, like having been done here.
They can still contest it in Fortnater, even civilly with this guy, but just so people don't think there's all kinds of rights being violated here.
Exigent circumstances is a legal term.
And that kind of covers the agent's investigative actions at this part.
He didn't always seem to be complaining.
I think he said basically, besides his wrist being a little sore or something, the agents treated him okay.
But they had to do that.
And then if they just put the handcuffs on him.
No, wait, I know Maureen's got to leave in a minute, but I want to ask a question first about that tent.
So this morning for an hour, they put a tent out in front of Nancy's front door and did some sort of analysis in there.
And they brought in some sort of, I don't know what it was called, but it was obviously a video type of machine.
And let's see, I have it written down.
Ultra Studio 4K mini kit, professional capture and playback device designed for high-end video workflows, connecting a computer, like a laptop or a desktop to professional video equipment.
You can do editing, color grading, live production, broadcast, and other things.
They also had a large pelican style box labeled video forensics.
Okay.
And what they said, what Michael Ruiz also reported was that they left carrying a diagram with human heights.
So Maureen, you tell me what they were doing under that tent.
That's exactly, I thought it was going to be one of two things.
They were either mapping out the bloodstain better.
And the other option was they were going to determine exactly, oh, yeah, they're determining exactly how tall this person is.
Oh, they can use it.
For the listening audience, we're showing an FBI agent, we think, carrying like a, it almost looks like the kind of thing that you'd have your child stand up against in the doctor's office to see how tall he is.
So using that, they can figure out how tall the perp was?
Yes.
And they're going to look at the bricks on the wall.
They're going to look at the tiles on the ground, those Satillo tiles.
And they're going to check from the camera that the exact angle that the camera is at and with the way the guy was hunching his head.
And I mean, they're going to be putting together a whole bunch of information and they're going to determine exactly how tall this person was.
Well, here's what else is crazy.
So the New York Post is right now reporting that the other thing they did under that tent was they took away the nest camera bracket, you know, the cradle.
Guys, isn't it nuts that that was still sitting there?
I like, just look what my Jake Whitman did yesterday, you know, like mounting it and trying to get the thing off of it.
And it's like, can we really have safely said there's nothing on that?
We should leave that sitting there.
I just feel like there's been a lot of questions about how this crime scene has been handled before the FBI got on scene.
All I can say is if they, it wouldn't have been that big of a deal if they didn't release the house back to the family, but they did release the house back to the family.
Not that they went in there and removed, you know, the bracket for the camera, whatever, but still they gave it back and now they're coming back.
Private Security Speculation00:02:02
Again, crossing every T, dotting every I, even if it's almost two weeks later, let's just say they're getting it done right, even if it's delayed.
Yeah, better lately than that.
Okay, last question, Maureen, before you run.
The visit to Annie and Tomas' house the other day, we discussed it.
Two agents or two, two lot, we think they were cops, went over.
They emerged holding a Whole Foods paper bag, not like an evidence bag that was plastic and fancy.
They had on blue latex gloves when they walked out of the house.
They weren't in the house for too long.
And then they went and they got the mail out of the mailbox with the latex gloves on.
Could this have just been a lot of speculation about what they were doing again at Annie and Tomas's, but could this have just been the family's in a remote location and they're helping them out?
Like she needed her sweater and she wanted her mail.
Right.
It could have been private security.
And the reason he's wearing gloves is because if there's something in that mailbox that ends up being evidence, this guy doesn't want to have to cough up his DNA for exclusionary purposes.
He's just said, hey, I just reached in, grabbed it, put it in a bag and handed it to them.
So if there's anything on it, it's either the perpetrators or theirs or the mailman's.
Okay.
Because I watched those guys.
They did look like possibly military, possibly law enforcement experience, but they could have also been private security, which is very common to hire after an incident like this when you need all kinds of things.
I mean, we probably have security there wherever the hell they're staying.
We know the family has hired security for both houses, I'm sure, because the media was just everywhere, but has denied hiring a private investigator.
One guy who helped the feds out on the Brian Kohlberger case showed up at that tent today outside of Nancy's house.
And there was some speculation earlier that this guy was a PI hired by the Guthries and they denied hiring a PI.
And it later came out, this is some like stud who helped out in the Kohlberger investigation and now is helping out in this one.
Maureen, I know you got to go.
I won't take advantage of your very, very generous time with us.
Debt and Insurance Tips00:03:08
Thank you.
And we'll talk to you soon.
Thank you.
So, Jim, we're going to pause here.
I think we're going to pause and we're going to bring in our friends from yesterday, James and Will.
But first, we're going to take a quick break.
Lots more to go through.
Stand by.
We'll be right back.
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Walmart Holster Lead00:15:20
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It's bold no BS news only on the Megan Kelly channel, SiriusXM 111, and on the Sirius XM app.
We're joined as we were yesterday by two others, James Hamilton, former FBI supervisory special agent and founder of the Hamilton Security Group, along with Will Geddes, elite bodyguard and security expert and founder of International Corporate Protection.
Gentlemen, a pleasure.
Thank you all so much for coming back.
Okay, a couple of things that I want to get to, including the evidence analysis that's going on right now of the abductor's outfit.
We've had so many smart armchair sleuths online on X doing their own searches for what is that backpack because it's pretty distinctive.
What is that jacket he's wearing?
Because that's that too is kind of distinctive with this horizontal stripe, thin stripe right across the middle, and it may be fleece.
And it seems like people have figured out that that backpack may be an Ozark Trail hiker backpack.
That it is apparently.
And then by the way, the local reporter, K. Aldi's Mary Coleman, she's been reporting, and that's one of the organizations that received the alleged ransom note.
She reported that indeed, a law enforcement source close to the case says they are familiar with this brand of Ozark Trail Hiker and they are looking into it.
They're looking into other brands as well, but they've got their eyes on this one.
And this was one that the online salutes came up with almost immediately.
It's cheap.
They sell it at Walmart, including the Walmart in Tucson, the Tucson Walmart superstore, where you can get it right now for $10.88.
So it's cheap.
It's $11.
And that dovetails pretty well with, I think, every one of your conclusion, which was this was not some super-trained hitman high-budget operation.
The $11 backpack thing probably jives for you.
I don't want to put words in your mouth, but I'll start with you, James, on it.
Thoughts?
Great.
It's, you know, technology is wonderful.
I just feel for these agents, these officers who are getting, I read last count, like 4,000 leads in 24 hours because these, as you call them, sleuths are doing all this great work.
And, you know, it's awesome, but it's also, you know, that stuff's got to be worked.
And it takes a while.
And there's not like an infinite stream of agents.
So it's wonderful.
And I think it's great.
I agree with you.
$11 backpack from Walmart would be completely in line with the Uncle Mike's crap holster this person was wearing.
So that's that all checks out.
But again, these leads have to get run down.
And, you know, Fitz was talking earlier about 24-7 shifts.
Yeah, they're not sleeping.
I remember working these, you know, very, very few kidnappings I worked, but you didn't go home.
It was like all hands on deck until you found this victim.
But how do you do it, James?
Like, do you, do you go into the Walmart and you say you carry these backpacks?
Yeah, we do.
Okay.
That's exactly what happens.
But then what?
You ask for purchases.
You ask for purchase orders.
You get a subpoena.
You ask for how many of these backpacks were sold.
They have all that?
Like a place like Walmart would have that, all of that recorded?
Yes.
And then you start looking.
Hopefully they, you know, as we're going down the road of him not being a pro would buy it in cash.
A pro would buy it with cash.
A pro would go to different stores, not buy all the material at the same store.
But, you know, an amateur probably use a credit card.
And, you know, that would be a huge break for us if we could get a credit card and then it's, it's on.
Okay.
We did take a look just to see if at that same Tucson Walmart they were selling face masks.
And we determined that they are not available at that Tucson Walmart.
You'd have to get that online.
So for whatever it's worth.
And I don't know whether that was still the case three months ago or whenever, but I mean, it would be, do you think it would be relatively recent, Will, that they'd be, that they'd be asking Walmart to search?
Because like if this guy bought this stuff five years ago, Walmart's not going to have that.
Yes, no, I mean, it really does depend on whether he had it already in his possession.
It was something that he'd been using.
But again, that's where it's going to be, you know, on a day-to-day basis.
But that's where it's going to be kind of interesting, certainly when they start joining up CCTV from neighborhoods, from various other areas, and to see some sort of lifespan of this individual.
Now they've hopefully got some sort of clear identification, certainly on what he was wearing, that they can try and join all these pieces together.
You know, as James was saying, it's a jigsaw puzzle.
And I would concur that I think this is much more of a non-professional in terms of the individual that's behind it.
Buying gray kit, i.e. buying sort of very low-cost items, is not unknown for professionals.
Professionals will do that to try and evade detection or discovery.
However, the one area which James rose, which I think is really important, was the Uncle Mike holster.
Now, if it was a professional, I think they would find it incredibly difficult to go into an operation with a sort of nylon holster as basic as that.
Explain to those of us who don't know about the holsters why that's so basic and low end.
Well, firstly was the positioning of the weapon.
You know, this weapon was overt.
It was not concealed.
And more often than not, you know, anybody who's used to carrying a firearm will be used to concealed carry or certainly have sufficiently good quality holsters because you only have to use anybody who uses a firearm will know if you have a cheap holster, that's going to wear out or it's going to let you down in some shape or form.
So, again, having that cheap holster indicates that this individual may not necessarily be well practiced or well-versed and have had a lifespan of using firearms because more often than not, as much as you invest in the weapon, you're also investing in the ancillary and auxiliary equipment that you use with it.
Okay.
So, pretty much everything about him looks cheap.
I mean, we looked it up and it was like the Luigi backpack that he used when he killed allegedly the CEO of United Healthcare, Brian Thompson.
It was like $300.
It was high-end.
He came from a rich family.
And we're seeing so far what we believe is the opposite of that with clothing that didn't look expensive, a backpack that you can get for $11.
The Ski Mask, for what it's worth, retails right now.
If you order it today, you can get it between February 20th and February 27th for $3.12.
So that's another, you know, low-end item that he appears to have used.
And if this is the guy, I want to ask you guys for your thoughts on the new videotape that may or may not be related.
But before you got here, we talked about how, like, even though there are some apparent differences between the Alley guy who's got two backpacks, we've been calling him Pac-Man, and the actual abductor, like the actual abductor to us looks a little thicker than Pac-Man, a little like fatter or just stockier in the legs and in the rear end in particular.
But who knows?
Because Abductor Man could have had a few more layers on.
We don't know.
But we are told that this video of Pac-Man took place in the wee hours of the morning, we believe post the abduction of Nancy Guthrie, and that it happened five miles south of Nancy Guthrie's home.
By the way, at least the guy who posted it on X, Nerdy Addict, described this as it was submitted to him as a tip.
And the person did also submit it to the FBI.
And this person is shown trying, this is the description that he got to unlock a side gate, to unlock a side gate.
I guess I shouldn't say that it happened after Nancy.
They say it has no time stamp.
We just know, quote, early morning hours of February 1st, which is when she was stolen.
So your thoughts, you guys, on the odds of this being like another criminal potentially in the area with the backpacks in a similar outfit.
And we thought we saw a possible weapon in his right hand jacket, his zippered pocket.
Maureen was suggesting she thought she saw that.
Anyway, not confirmed, but a speculative possibility.
I thought I saw a time stamp.
Maybe you should play that video again, but I thought I saw a time stamp in the bottom right, and it was saying 1:53 a.m. on February the 1st.
Okay, we'll have to go back and look at that.
Well, if that's true, how can he possibly be in this in two places at one time?
Hard to do.
Very hard.
Well, but it also assumes that the camera was set on the right time.
Correct.
And that's an excellent point.
And, you know, I've seen so many not set on the exact right time zone.
They didn't factor in leap year.
It could have been off, and that can easily explain it.
It's quite, that's quite a good lead that someone needs to find out who that person is.
And he's definitely worth a really strong investigative interview.
I think Fitz wanted to comment, but I was laughing when Will was talking about the Uncle Mike thing.
I just want to go back to the holster.
So we call it that because that's a very cheap holster that you would usually see like a hunter purchase for a big revolver.
And that one right there, yeah, that's for a big revolver, like a six-inch, eight-inch barrel.
And what's happened here is they've stuck a semi-auto smaller pistol into this thing.
And it's such so haphazard, it reminds me very much of like where I live, where a lot of people carry what we call open carry.
And it's like a cowboy.
Like it's insane.
And it looks like that.
The pistol doesn't match the holster.
It's like total amateur hour.
And you just kind of, well, most of us, we just kind of laugh about it.
And then I leave and get away from them because they're dangerous.
But yeah, that's why I was laughing at that.
Just FYI, James, my team is confirming, yes, it says 1.53 Mountain Standard Time on February 1st, 2026.
That's the timestamp on there.
And again, now I do not, I don't trust any of these times at this point.
But the sheriff said at 1.47 a.m. The Nest cameras were disconnected at Nancy's.
And at 2.12 a.m., they alerted image detected.
And he said, you know, could have been a man, could have been an animal, 2.12.
Now, TMZ is reporting that it was 2.12 a.m. that the abductor tried to get in, as we saw, or tried to cover up the Nest Cam and did all the stuff, the guy with the face mask.
That's 2.12 a.m.
I haven't confirmed that independently, but that's what TMZ is reporting, that that was at 2.12.
This is 1.53 Mountain Standard Time.
So I don't know.
Like, could you, if you take the 147 ring camera disconnected out of it, which I will say for the record, my team, some of whom have Nest cameras, have told me, whatever, rings or Nest, that sometimes they go offline and you get that.
Sometimes the camera will say offline because whatever, you have an internet hit, et cetera.
In any event, 1.53 to 2.12.
What's that?
7, 12, 17 minutes.
I don't want to do the math.
It's 7 plus 12, which is 19.
Thank you.
Megan, can I tell you on the task force wall, there's a big whiteboard, probably digital, and they have the times exactly lined up what they are.
And they've gone back to the ring company or Nest, whatever.
They know.
So we can speculate a lot.
And this is healthy to do for us and trying to piece these items together.
But I'm assuming that the investigators themselves know exactly what this is.
And then just let me go back a couple minutes here.
In the Unibomb case, agents went out to every single junkyard in the country.
Now think about that.
Trying to find the components of the devices, the IEDs, improvised explosive devices, the bombs the Unibomber was sending through the mail.
And some of these, certainly in rural areas, some guy just has his backyard and that's a junkyard.
But agents wound up tracking down every single, because a lot of people don't know this, but before he was called Unibomb or Unibomber, he was called the junkyard bomber because all the devices were handmade or picked up from loose structures.
Then when the manifesto came in and the letters or the bombs were addressed to people, it took them not too long to figure out all that information is coming from the who's who book in libraries.
This is pre-internet.
Remember as a kid, the biggest book in the library was always who, who's who's.
You couldn't check it out.
It was just a reference menu.
FBI agents went to every single library in the country trying to get information.
Hey, who's coming in?
Who's looking at these?
Who's paging through them?
Looking, you know, here's the composites book, anything like this.
And interesting, a lot of the university, university libraries would not help at first.
But once a professor got bombed and seriously injured Yale University and other universities, they said, oh, FBI, come on back.
We think we can help you now.
That's just a side story there.
But it just shows you, and that's pre-internet.
And that just shows you they'll go in person and do this.
And there are agents all over the country now fanning out, looking at these different places where these are sold in an attempt to determine the providence of the mask, backpack, everything we're talking about.
Right now, we get a report as we're talking, Fox News, FBI and the sheriff seeking to question man with backpack captured on video just miles from Nancy Guthrie's home on the night she vanished.
They want to speak with the guy seen on the camera.
That makes perfect sense.
I think Maureen raised a good point too, that is there any possibility they haven't already gone to that location and searched for whatever was in that backpack, the actual backpack, whatever remnants were there.
What if this, if the guy who broke the story, nerdy addict, if he's correct, that the person is trying to unlock a side gate, that they've been through that side gate.
I mean, how long does it take to get a warrant?
I guess that's one of the relevant questions because, you know, getting the warrant is important so that whatever evidence may or may not be there can be admitted later down the line.
But does it take a long time to get a warrant and get over there and get that searched while you put out basically an APB for the man shown in the tape?
Well, he wouldn't need one in this case.
Side Gate Unlocking Theory00:15:09
I mean, this is ostensibly a third-party residence that we don't have any information that this guy owns that house because he would have been able to just walk through that gate.
So the people that own it, I mean, I can run over there with Fitz and say, hey, you know, FBI, we need to talk to you about the Nancy Guthrie investigation.
And we have reason to believe this guy tried to get over your fence.
Do you mind if we look?
And they're going to say nine times out of 10, absolutely you can look.
And that's called a consent search.
Now, if they start to say, hell no, you can't, well, okay, we may have to use existent circumstances, maybe stretch it, or have to get a warrant.
We can hold it.
You know, we can secure that area and make sure nothing's tampered with until we go get a warrant.
But my experience is, you know, because you're nice and they teach agents how to be nice and talk to people, you know, you can get consent from the homeowner.
That's not that difficult.
I will say, just looking at it, even though this guy, Pac-Man, as we're calling him with the double backpack, looks skinnier to me than the abductor.
One thing I will say is yesterday we talked about whether the abductor has some sort of a limp or something wrong with his leg because his gait is a little weird.
It's a little stilted.
The way he goes down off of that step, it's like he almost doesn't bend his leg the way a normal person would.
There, here it is, right there.
That could just be because he's in the dark.
He doesn't know where the step is.
You know, I don't want to attribute too much to it.
But this guy seems to have also an odd gate.
There's got to be somebody at the FBI who does gate analysis, right?
We saw that with the pipe bombing.
The pipe bomber, where the Blaze had a gate analysis that told them it was a woman who had a connection with the federal government.
She then allegedly had an alibi showing that she was with her dogs, though I don't know.
I still have questions about the pipe bomber case, if I'm totally honest.
In any event, they said that's not true and that the pipe bomber was this, you know, this kid, this sort of autistic kid who lived in Maryland.
But they have somebody to analyze gate, do they not?
They not?
Yeah, they do either in the FBI or they have experts on call to assist in that regard.
That's kind of a newer, I don't think that would be testimonial or evidentiary, but certainly from an investigative perspective, that would be valuable to have, certainly to compare one person's gate to another.
I know there's a lot of that, not just in the J5 bomber case, certainly in the last months or so before the arrest came, but certainly in the Brown University case, people are analyzing the gate on that person.
And just to go back to the house where this double packed man, One version we're calling them.
Yeah.
We haven't heard anything about the people who live in that house.
And is the address by the way?
And if it's even a house, right?
It looks like a back alley to like an apartment complex or some sort of whatever it is.
And does the address, you know, somehow the numbers match up, you know, to look, Fitz, it looks like he's in a parking garage there.
Look, there's a, there's two cars we can see in the foreground.
There's cars in the background, multiple.
It looks like some sort of a parking complex or garage.
So this is.
Yeah.
I can't determine that.
People, I'm sure they know where it is right now, but obviously talk to everybody who lives there and what is this person doing in that particular environment.
And that somehow the address or street even resembles a little bit, you know, Nancy Guthrie's.
I know it's five or so miles away, but could this be a wrong idea?
And let me tell you, I worked in 2001, the case of the Xantop professors from Dartmouth University murdered in their home, stabbed to death.
Knife Sheath, coincidentally, left behind in that case, too, which helped eventually arrest two teenagers from across the line in Vermont.
But what they did, the two teenagers, a day or two before, they knocked on different neighbors' doors to get in because they were pretending they were going to do some kind of a survey.
They had a clipboard back in the day, whatever, and to make it look official.
And they actually knocked on these doors.
Luckily, those neighbors said, not interested, not interested.
The Xantops, being professors at Dartmouth, let them in.
And next thing you know, they get stabbed to death, both of them.
Different case.
I realize that.
And we may have a different guy here at this other location, but related to the guy at Guthrie House.
So they could have practice runs.
They could have a wrong address.
They could be trying to get anywhere.
Now we're saying, now we're going to territory.
Is this completely unrelated to anything we've been discussing here with Savannah?
I have to say, like, the guy looks too skinny to me.
The rarest of the rare.
Can we just look at the, let's look at the abductor video one more time, team?
Let's put that back on the board because the first thing I said about the actual abductor, not this, not Pac-Man, abductor man.
Look, look at his rear end and his legs.
The guy on the right, to me, looks like he's got a good, I don't know, 25 pounds on Pac-Man.
He's not skinny.
That was actually one of the first things we agreed on about Abductor.
But Pac-Man is kind of skinny.
You see it because he's lifting up his arms, trying to shove that backpack over that gate.
And his jacket lifts up and you can see his entire backside and his legs.
And he is a very skinny guy, not very skinny, but he's a skinny guy.
This guy, would you describe this guy as very skinny, abductor man?
No.
No, I think abductor man is certainly a bit more junky, a bit more heavier set.
Pac-Man, I think where it's really particularly useful, having identified Pac-Man, will be to inevitably look at any other neighbor's ring doorbells or CCTV to basically see what direction he came from.
And did he come from a vehicle before he went up to that sort of gate at the back to put his stuff over?
And ultimately, at the end of the day, I think the key issue here is joining those two together.
If they were working together, then you're doubling up your potentials for discovery of one or the other, which I mean, I'm sure Fitz and James will be able to give you a great deal more detail on.
But ultimately, the two, quite often you may find, particularly in amateurs, that they will source their equipment from similar places unless they already have it within their wardrobe.
Okay, so that's that's very interesting.
Like, are those are they distinct men and are they working together?
And do they just look similar because they're both low-end shoppers and this was not some high-end caper?
They probably, you know, I mean, in the way I wear and look like a lot of the women I hang out with, so do they.
Go ahead, James.
I can see you want to get in.
Well, I was just smiling because I, you know, we don't like coincidences at all in our business.
And this is a hell of a coincidence that you've got two males walking around within five miles of each other at 2 a.m. in the morning with backpacks and trying to enter or exit portals.
That's that's a hell of a coincidence.
So for me, it's a great lead.
It's something that they have to run down.
Maybe he's not involved.
You know, it's possible.
But my money right now is it's not that I wouldn't lean that way.
I would lean toward where the hell were you?
Do you know Nancy Guthrie?
Like everything, everything we got is going to go to find who this person is and do a really strong interview and not create some story of, oh, yeah, it's just a coincidence that he just happens to also be out with a backpack.
And by the way, that second backpack, the way that he's holding it over that fence is bizarre.
It's very strange the way he uses his left hand to put it up over the fence as if there's something in it that he doesn't want to disrupt.
You'll see him do it here.
I'm a big audience.
It's on his left shoulder.
Now he took it off.
Now he's got it in his left hand.
And it looks like he's trying to like shove it over to me.
I thought he was trying to like push it over and couldn't do it.
And he fails.
It's almost like it almost looks like there's some sort of an imaginary wall there that he didn't expect to be there.
And he really wanted to shove that backpack over, but he can't.
And he abandons it.
See, he doesn't even look like he's using force, but it doesn't happen.
And he takes the backpack back and walks away with it.
Keep going, James.
Well, almost like he had some type of device in there that he thought would unlock it.
It looks like he's trying to swipe it or have it over the other side.
It's going to somehow do something.
It's bizarre the way he does that.
So, you know, again, I'd like to find out who this individual is.
What are you doing?
And just run it to the ground and don't.
This is a good lead.
How long do you think it's going to take the FBI to figure out who this guy is?
Because unlike Abductor Man, he's not wearing a mask.
And we know this guy is in Tucson, or at least was.
And he too wasn't expecting to find his picture all over the internet today.
Well, I don't know if you and Fitz and Maureen talked about this earlier, but I'm shocked that we're only talking 50,000 bucks right now.
I mean, that reward, that's a joke.
Really amp it up?
Hell yeah.
$50,000.
That's nothing.
You know, what should it be?
I put it up to half a million dollars.
It's 11, 12 days now.
I want this woman back.
What's 500 grand?
We got that kind of money.
You know, I just, for me, let's get some, let's get some strong, strong interest to identify these people.
Are you not worried that it's going to incentivize the crazies?
You know, like I think they're incentivized already.
We're dropping Bitcoin money and all that's already happened.
Those horses have left the barn, as we say where I come from.
That loser popped up again, too.
I'll get to him in a second.
I can see you want to get in, Fitz.
Go ahead.
Yeah, I just, there's been research done about rewards over the years.
Unabomber was 1 million, the highest reward ever.
Osama bin Laden was 25 million.
Sometimes they work, sometimes they don't.
I always prefer when people come to me wanting to reward money as opposed to some other issues that sometimes are just telling lies.
But I think context is important about this double Pac-Man guy for what we're calling him.
I would really like to interview all the sheriffs that work, deputy sheriffs that work in that area and see what kind of transient population.
He looks white.
I mean, he looks Caucasian.
It isn't like he's an immigrant across the border, 60-some miles away.
So there may be guys that roam around at night.
As a patrol officer, I'd shut my lights off, turn my engine off.
You'd be surprised the stuff that just happens around you, the odd people that show up.
And this is like in a suburb of Philadelphia, probably not that different than where this area is.
So I'm not ruling this guy in or out.
And I said earlier, it's a coincidence on steroids if in fact, you know, within the same hour timeframe, we have two different things happening with guys with backpacks about five miles apart.
We know the guy is the abductor.
He's guilty.
He did his crime.
I'll suspend all his rights to being innocent here because he did something there at that house.
This guy, we don't know his involvement.
And look at this.
Can we zero in on Pac-Man, man?
You really can see the facial hair more clearly in that shot that we're running right now.
Maybe we can run it again.
Look at the beard.
Yeah.
I mean, you can see it very clearly.
He's got like the devil beard, not the beard that's like all over your cheeks, but like just down at the chin.
And you can't quite see what's happening above his lip or whether he's got the soul patch there, but it is a black beard.
We'll count ourselves lucky that he chose not to wear a mask then or the mask or a mask, even a COVID type mask to cover himself.
So he's going to be identified.
That was the first question you asked.
That's only a matter of hours.
And if he doesn't come forward, because even if he's not part of this abduction, he certainly looks like he's up to no good at two in the morning with the backpacks in the alley.
Like that does not, whatever.
I mean, we're just presuming.
But so if the guy doesn't come forward, that's even more suspicious, right?
Like the FBI, when the FBI tracks him down, they're going to be even more suspicious of him because he knows, this guy knows by now that everybody's looking for him.
And why wouldn't you come forward?
If it's petty anti-crime and, you know, they're looking at you for like a possible murder kidnapping.
I don't know.
What do you do?
Yeah, the word is on the street.
And again, with the deputy sheriff, we don't care if you're looking to urinate or defecate or smoke a joint or even do a petty larceny, as you said.
We want to know if you're involved in this thing.
So the word is going to get out.
If this is a local guy who roams the neighborhoods at night, I just don't know.
Is there, again, a homeless encampment somewhere near there or a couple guys that hang out in a park somewhere?
We don't know that.
Or is it somehow tied into this thing?
I mean, probably every neighborhood in the country, probably around 2 a.m., something was happening that looks something like this.
The problem is five miles away within an hour of a major abduction of anyone, not to mention Nancy Guthrie, that has to be taken to its logical conclusion.
This is their priority.
The jacket that's similar with the round head with the beard that's the right color and in the right place, like the facial hair.
Yeah.
I want to ask you guys about another development today.
I hesitate to even raise it because it's just, it seems such obvious BS, but okay, let's talk about it.
You remember yesterday we talked about the fact that TMZ had received a note, an email from some third party saying, I'm not the kidnapper, but I know who it is.
And I want somebody to give me one Bitcoin, which is worth about $65,000, $67,000.
And I will tell you who the kidnapper is.
So that didn't happen.
Nobody gave him his Bitcoin.
And then today, TMZ this morning reported the following.
They've received a new email from a person who claims to know the identity of Nancy Guthrie's kidnapper.
They received the email just after 8 a.m. Pacific time, Thursday.
Okay, so 11 o'clock Eastern.
And the person who sent the email claimed they are, quote, not being taken seriously, end quote.
And they're not happy about that.
They went on to say that, quote, he makes some ominous statements in the email.
TMZ is cooperating with law enforcement by not disclosing specifics.
One thing he makes clear, the situation has changed from Wednesday to Thursday.
TMZ goes on to say, quote, as for why he wants a Bitcoin, he says he will need money to lay low after identifying the kidnapper for fear of retaliation.
He also worries he might be incriminated.
This is a quote, incriminated like that Carlos guy, meaning the delivery man who was detained and released the other day.
The email reportedly ends with the sender saying this is their final attempt to, quote, help.
By the way, they did also report that TMZ monitored the account that he had linked to.
He did link to a Bitcoin account for his big deposit, and they said nothing was deposited.
Anonymous Bitcoin Demands00:05:17
Nothing has been deposited thus far, at least as of the end of the day on Wednesday.
So now he's mad.
It didn't work.
Is this an obvious joke?
Or what does the FBI do with this?
I'd assign it to a new agent, but that's just me.
The serious leads are going to be handled by the serious veteran agents and some new agents going to go.
Oh, you mean like brand new to the FBI?
Yeah, go over there to TMZ and shag this thing.
I don't know.
I'm saying it a little bit of tongue-in-cheek, but come on.
I mean, if the FBI, you know, ran out with everything they had, with everything like that, then they wouldn't be able to really find Pac-Man, which is a much more credible lead than this nonsense through TMZ for one Bitcoin.
And I assure you, there are psychics and mediums, et cetera, getting in touch with the family and even law enforcement.
It's invariable when you work these kind of cases saying, you know, they'll do it.
Well, they would like some money you could possibly help.
They're also coming in free of charge, I'm sure, that the body is within 50 miles of a body of water or 25 miles of railroad tracks.
And I'm just saying, I'm not saying Mrs. Guthrie is a body at this point, but that's what kind of stuff they call in.
I've never had luck with a psychic in that regard.
So yeah, this leap, you just have to say contact the FBI.
They'll give you at least $50,000 and they'll keep you anonymous.
This is a game being played locally, somewhere in the U.S. or somewhere overseas, possibly even tied in to the other Bitcoin people and their scam that they tried to run earlier.
This is a federal offense.
I mean, I think this is obstruction of justice, what they're doing here.
They're distracting the FBI from solving an actual crime and purporting to have information that they, we believe, do not have.
They're lying.
And if they told that lie to the face of an FBI agent, it would be another crime.
Go ahead, Will.
I mean, I agree with the chaps.
I mean, I've dealt with a number of ransom demands and coming through various different mediums.
And there's always this kind of small amount that is requested.
I know 65,000 doesn't sound like a small amount, but in relative terms, it's a very, very small amount.
And if you have someone who is offering to basically say, well, I will give you all that critical information.
I'll tell you where the hostage is, but is not able to provide any more substance or any more gravity to that claim.
It is just white noise.
It's just interference.
And again, I agree with James entirely, Anfit, that that's something which is battered off to one side.
And there are many ways to trace it from an email account.
There are lots of very surreptitious ways that I may have allegedly utilized in the past to try and identify the IP address and the actual user themselves.
But again, there's a lot of information like what sort of email account?
Is it a disposable one?
Is it a secure one?
You know, again, there's so much intelligence you can get just from those communications.
Are you at all surprised, Will, that they haven't caught whoever's behind those other Bitcoin demands who is either pretending to be the kidnapper or possibly is the kidnapper?
Are you surprised?
Here we are 11 days in and they still haven't made an arrest there?
Well, again, they may not have made an arrest.
I mean, I certainly know that the authorities and most certainly the FBI will have the ability to reverse engineer blockchain.
You know, blockchain used to be a very, very secure way of people being able to utilize, obviously, the exchange of Bitcoins.
And it was used very much by the dark web and it was used by various sort of illicits and criminal enterprises.
But nowadays, you can actually reverse engineer and trace back who is the actual wallet owner.
So there's a good chance.
I mean, the chaps will probably be able to give you a better grasp on this.
But in my estimation, they probably may have arrested them or they're observing them to see whether they have any further intelligence value.
Oh, well, that would be very good news.
I will say this: my team's reminding me that TMZ has been getting all of these communications via an anonymous tip form.
And that's what the other two news organizations, that's how I think why they were chosen too, because, well, they're local and they had anonymous tip lines too.
That's how this person has been going in.
So, like, not through a traditional email, exactly.
I don't know.
Maybe that makes it tougher.
And if so, that person, that person has some level of sophistication.
You know, the Bitcoin person, the one who's asking for the money in USD.
Yeah, maybe.
I mean, I've not often, sorry, chaps, I'll just quickly in on this one.
I know of enough organizations that have anonymous lines, whether it be for whistleblowing or otherwise, that aren't necessarily as anonymous as one might imagine.
Not like when the feds are involved.
Okay, we'll do, we'll do Fitz and then, James, go ahead.
If I can add here, sort of a public statement to everyone who's listening: if you have information about this case, we've seen enough of abduction men.
You have nothing to worry about.
I guarantee you, you're going to be safe.
This is not some worldwide syndicate involved in this.
This is not even organized crime.
This is someone that, if you have information, call it, get away if you have to, move out of the house for a few days.
This will not come back to harm you.
This guy is an opportunist, some pre-planning involved, perhaps.
Not a whole lot, I think we're learning here.
Annie Tommaso's Death00:14:34
But this guy, besides what he did to Mrs. Guthrie, and hopefully she's still with us, I'm still keeping a positive outlook there.
But this guy is probably more of a menace to himself than anything else.
Certainly, any potential witnesses out there.
So please contact the FBI.
I put out some pointers yesterday with you, Megan.
Behavioral characteristics of what this guy is doing now.
Please check those out.
And that's what he's doing and that's what he's not doing.
And this is going to be who he is.
Go ahead, James.
Oh, I just maybe shouldn't smile as much as I am, but it reminds me a lot of D.B. Cooper and Jimmy Hoffa.
I mean, as an FBI agent, we probably didn't go a month without somebody coming forward and saying, yeah, I know who D.B. Cooper was.
I know who he really was, or I know exactly where Jimmy Hoffa is buried.
And if you give me X, I'll tell you, well, it never happened, you know.
And just, I'm just smiling about it because these cases bring out those types of people and those types of allegations, you know.
I have to end it on this because there's a lot of speculation online, and we've got a lot of emails about this about the pacemaker because, you know, they keep going back to Annie and Tommas's house.
And that could be because Annie and Tomas are suspects, or it could be because Nancy was there earlier the evening that she disappeared.
And they think there's more clues somehow to glean.
Many people have wondered: is it possible that they think she died there?
That Nancy was killed earlier than we think and that she died there.
Now, I think that fell apart when we saw Abductor Man ringing the doorbell or messing with the doorbell.
Like the story that an abductor showed up is not fake.
And I don't believe, I just don't believe there's any way she was killed earlier in the evening because, and I mean, you guys tell me what you know.
The pacemaker, the pacemaker would have shown an event.
And a lot of people have been writing in saying the pacemaker doesn't stop just because the person's killed.
Well, I know that.
I know that, which is why there's some remote chance that if you took her phone and turned on the pacemaker app and started walking around Tucson, you could, you might actually connect with the pacemaker, even if Nancy is no longer with us.
I mean, the odds are slim.
You have to be, I've heard anyplace from 10 feet to 30 feet in order for them to sink.
But I'm not saying that the pacemaker, it's not about whether the pacemaker goes dormant when the person has died.
But I have yet to find a cardiologist or anesthesiologist to tell me anything other than if the heart has any sort of a major event, including that it stops beating, that it wouldn't communicate that to the phone.
So obviously there would be no communication after 228 on the night she went missing because they had stopped sinking.
But prior to that point, we're told by law enforcement they were sinking.
There was no problem with the pacemaker sinking with the phone.
And so even with a delay and download information, you know, like if the last information went at 227, it might take an hour or two for it to actually download that onto the phone because I guess there's some sort of a lag in the delay.
You would know if the heart had stopped beating, if this patient's heart completely stopped.
I just can't get past that.
And clearly, law enforcement agrees with me, or this whole thing is a wild goose chase.
If that sheriff, and I'm sure he spoke to the pacemaker doctor, to the cardiologist, and knows exactly how it works in this case, there is no way the FBI would be putting us through all of this if they really had reason to believe she died, that Nancy's no longer with us.
Why would he be saying, I have to believe she's alive, that she's still out there and talking with the family about doing the hostage videos and all that?
Like, you guys just tell me once and for all, do you have any reason to believe that law enforcement thinks she died prior to 2:28 a.m.
I see no indications of law enforcement believing that I agree with this.
Yeah, likewise.
I mean, that, so what that answers for me is: A, Nancy Guthrie had the scare of her life when that man showed up in her bedroom in the wee hours of that morning.
And B, the reason they are going back to Annie's and Tommaso's house all the time, I think, is they're wondering if they had anything to do with it.
I just don't like, I don't understand why you'd be interviewing the neighbors over and over and over.
And Phil Holloway, who's out there for us, we didn't get to this in his hit, but he's been talking to the neighbors.
And the neighbors told him that they keep getting asked about Annie and Tommaso and what are they like?
You know, that this is what the FBI and the sheriff's deputies are asking the neighbors.
And he also mentioned for what it's worth that they're very interested in like a phone.
Have they seen evidence of any phone anywhere?
You know, maybe they're looking for evidence of, you know, that the guy may have dropped, et cetera.
Anyway, I don't mean to condemn them, but I just think like that's them doing their shoe leather FBI work.
Is it not like we've talked about family, friends, associates, neighbors, whatever?
And there's no reason to be asking the neighbors what these two are like, going back there time and time again if you're not potentially interested in them.
Yeah.
Megan.
I mean, there's one question that's sort of been raised in the back of my mind, Megan, which again, I'd be interested in the other chaps and what they have to say is whether the network has been contacted, the Senate network, to actually do the mapping from the cell towers near to obviously Nancy's house and also to the sister's house to determine, obviously, the IMEIs of whichever cell phones were in the area at that particular time.
And I know, certainly in terms of geolocation, you can get it down to 50 feet if obviously there are sufficient cell towers in the area.
So we're not looking at enormous amounts of space, but you can isolate it.
And the intelligence agencies over here in the UK, for example, have used that very efficiently to detect terrorists, for example, who have been using burner cells, but they've got their own cells with them when they've been detected, obviously going off and making those calls rather than leaving their own cell phones behind.
So I'd be interested to see what cell phone data has been gathered by, obviously, the Bureau and what information is isolating it.
Maybe certain recognized cell phones have been identified or the IMEIs.
Go ahead, Megan.
We've discussed this before, I forget.
How many children does Annie and Tommaso have, and how old are they?
I don't remember.
I don't know the answer.
They would be a valuable source of information.
And depending on their age, there are experts within the FBI, and they certainly contract with people that have expertise in interviewing children.
Now, it'd be very interesting if they would permit their children to be independently interviewed by professionals.
And again, I'm not casting aspersions here.
I don't know.
No.
But just to get every single bit of this story lined up, what did you hear mommy say?
Daddy say, grandmom, how was it that night?
So they would be, we don't bring, we haven't heard anything about that, at least I haven't.
But I certainly want to know.
I would certainly want to know if they've been interviewed.
And the investigators would have been remiss if they haven't taken them apart.
It was interesting in the Ramsey case, John Benet Ramsey, they wouldn't let him be Burke be interviewed for months and months at a time.
Finally, they did accede to it.
So I'm assuming this will be different, but I would like to know what those kids have to say.
And as I said earlier on, as a young police officer working homicide cases, well before the internet, you learn so much about people with extended family, friends, neighbors, workmates, schoolmates.
There's just so much there.
Doesn't mean anyone's guilty of a crime, but did someone have an affair and not admit to it?
Do they have someone on the side, a boy or a girlfriend, and they don't want they lie about that at first?
Well, why did you lie?
Well, I don't want my wife finding out.
Don't want my husband finding out.
I'm not saying that's what happened here with Annie and Tommaso, but there's going to be some things uncomfortable for them to admit that they're going to have to.
Agents have to look that down.
Doesn't mean they were involved in the death of their mother or mother-in-law, but there's a lot that we're not hearing about this, and the kids may know something.
Parade magazine reports that they have one son together, but we don't know how old he is.
I think they only got married 2006.
I think they got married in 2006.
So I suppose if you assume they didn't have children until they got married, he's no more than 20 years old.
He could be younger than that.
I don't know.
It's been precious little information about who else is living in that house or even really about them.
There's really not much information at all about them.
She's a poet.
He's a part-time middle school teacher and a band member.
They don't have a lot of money.
I mean, that's got to be clear.
Everybody knows a poet and a part-time middle school teacher are not rich.
They live in a nice house, but I think it could be one of those situations where it's just appreciated because it's worth in the mid $600,000 range.
I don't know how they're supporting themselves.
I mean, very few poets are, you know, Joseph Massey is the official poet of the Megan Kelly show.
He's constantly writing about how difficult it is to pay your bills as a poet.
So I don't think it's a lucrative profession.
I'm sure they're looking at their findings.
And the dynamics of a sibling who's a multimillionaire.
Again, no one's accusing them of anything.
And sometimes that causes problems in the family.
It's possible.
Well, you'd be talking about it.
I mean, I guess that's really what we're getting to as you guys, as agents.
Wouldn't that be a part of the discussion?
You got the one sister who has no money and you got the other one who's got tens of millions of dollars.
And the one sister's doing all the hard labor with the mom and the other sister's not.
And maybe there's resentment there.
You know, they don't, they're not telegraphing that.
They're telegraphing closeness.
But I mean, I've told you this before.
I've told the audience before.
Everything you see telegraphed from the Today Show about how close everybody is is a lie.
It is a lie.
Trust me.
They are about building images over there to sell ads.
I mean, that's truly what it is.
I was there.
I was on the inside.
I was asked to be part of this.
So you can't go by what you see in like the family reels about how tight everybody is.
That's bullshit TV fake stuff.
So we don't know what's what, but I can see that dynamic potentially causing some resentment.
And I'm sure you tell me, and James, you take it.
Like, would that be something the FBI is kicking around and then looking into?
Yeah, I think, first of all, I will come back to Will's point in a second, but let's key in on where you were, Megan, talking about motive.
You know, we always kind of start there.
You know, who, who has motive?
Who would want this individual hurt?
And invariably, you look at the family.
Invariably, you look at, you know, who saw them last.
In this case, the family.
And then you just mentioned a lot of dynamics that add even more intrigue to the family.
And so certainly that's a line.
But just as you're saying that I guess the today show, it's not all as rosy as it appears, you know, that happens also in these big cases.
Okay.
So they're going to go and have press conferences and they're going to use words like partners and the FBI and our partners.
And that's all fine.
But at the end of the day, someone is behind the scenes actually, you know, driving case strategy.
And hopefully that is a symbiotic relationship right now and not dispersed where the sheriff's office is doing one thing, the FBI is doing one thing, maybe the state police is doing one thing.
That's a recipe for disaster.
So you need to have some consistency with regards to the strategy.
And certainly, you know, if I was running it, you'd have a group of investigators who are, okay, you have the family, right?
Then you have another group of investigators who are handling these crazy ass leads that are coming in about, you know, the TMZ, whatever, right?
You got that.
And then you got a bucket of investigators who are going out looking for a black glove on the side of the road, right?
But somebody's got it behind all of that.
Yeah.
Somebody behind all that is driving case strategy.
Right.
And so that what we're doing is we're not spending so much.
And I've seen this happen and Fist might have seen this too, where the agents are really working on a certain credible lead.
And then you find that the headshed, in our case, the SAC and the ASAC are running their own part of the investigation and doing interviews you don't even know about.
And that happened to me on a big case.
We were working it.
And that's frustrating as hell.
But yeah, certainly those things that you mentioned are being looked at with regards to families.
That's just how it is.
I mean, John Minae Ramsey is a great example.
And dovetail on that, where Will is going, yes, with the cell phones.
And yes, the FBI has their own unit that just does those types of things.
That's really all I'm going to really say about it.
But I will say, knowing that technology, I am concerned that here we are 12 days later and we don't have her body.
That makes me very nervous because I, you know, I've been involved in cases where we never got her back.
You know, I can name one right now, you know, in South Carolina that we never got her back.
And we think we know who did it.
But that's what makes me nervous.
Is I really would hope we'd have a break by now and something.
Yeah.
I think keeping on the I mean, Megan, another thing which was crossing my mind, and again, I'd be interested, obviously, in everybody's thoughts on this, is that I certainly know of a number of people who have pacemakers and who are in a fairly volatile or certainly delicate disposition.
And the sister being so close and certainly being involved in trying to assist, obviously, and provide support to Nancy, that they that maybe Nancy, did she have an emergency response tag which she can press in the event that she may be having a heart attack or is in distress or falls over, like a lot of seniors will have, and whether that they had that technology and whether that was utilized?
Family Emergency Response00:02:22
That's a good question.
I don't know.
I haven't heard anything about the emergency response necklace.
And it's a good question, though, because that'd be your first move if somebody came into your bedroom in the middle of the night.
They haven't mentioned anything about it, which suggests to me maybe not.
And they did say that while she was limited physically, I mean, she could move.
She had a cane.
She wasn't like wheelchair-bound.
So it is, I don't know, it's possible she didn't opt for that.
It's one of those things, the medic alert.
It's like one of those before and after moments when you know you're getting old.
My mom put it at when Mr. Rogers starts to look hot.
That's when she knew she knew she'd crossed over to the dark side.
Well, God bless her.
God bless my mom.
God bless Nancy.
And the prayers continue as we await going into day 12 better news on this investigation.
Guys, thank you all so much.
You're so welcome.
Thanks for having us.
Thank you.
Really grateful.
Wow, what a panel.
They're so great.
We're so lucky.
All right, we're going to leave it there for today, but we will be back tomorrow with any updates and relevant information.
And if you have any thoughts you want to share with us, please send them to me.
It's megan, M-E-G-Y-N, at MeganKelly.com.
We'll talk to you tomorrow.
Thanks for listening to the Megan Kelly Show.
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