Detectives now see Nancy Guthrie’s quiet Tucson home not as a sanctuary, but as the primary crime scene. The stopped Bluetooth signal between her pacemaker and Apple Watch has become a chilling timestamp: sometime after 9:45 p.m. Saturday and before 2 a.m. Sunday, something went catastrophically wrong. Friends sounded the alarm when she missed church, but by then, the trail was already cooling and her life‑sustaining medication was untouched.
Former FBI special agent Nicole Parker believes this was not a random predator, but someone with a “deep grievance” who understood Nancy’s routines, vulnerabilities, and the layout of her home. That theory, combined with signs of forced entry and blood, has turned a missing-person case into a race against time. As the nation watches a TV star’s private horror unfold, investigators are betting on one thing: that whoever knew Nancy well enough to take her also left behind the mistake that will finally bring her home.
