The search for Savannah Guthrie’s mother, 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie, has extended to an eighth day.
Late Saturday, “Today” anchor Savannah Guthrie, flanked by siblings Camron and Annie, released a video begging for their mother’s safe return and telling Nancy’s abductors, “We beg you now to return our mother to us, so that we can celebrate with her.” Guthrie said the family was willing to pay for the octogenarian’s return.
The timeline of the disappearance of Savannah Guthrie’s mom:

Pima County Sheriff gives update on search for Nancy Guthrie
We got another “no update, update” on the search for Nancy Guthrie from the Pima County Sheriff’s Department on Sunday.
There are still no suspects or person of interest — and no suspect vehicles have been identified.
“Detectives and agents continue to conduct follow-up at multiple locations. Details of that follow-up are not being released at this time,” the sheriff’s department said.
Authorities conduct late-night search of Annie Guthrie’s home as hunt for Nancy Guthrie enters day seven
Authorities were spotted conducting a late-night search of Annie Guthrie’s home as the search for her and Savannah Guthrie’s mom, Nancy, enters day seven.

Law enforcement were seen taking photographs at Annie and husband Tommaso Cioni’s Tucson, Ariz., home late Saturday until around 10:30 p.m. MT, according to NewsNations’ Brian Entin.
The outlet reported an agent carrying a silver briefcase into the home.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Department did not immediately return Page Six’s request for comment.
Sen. Mark Kelly says Savannah Guthrie rang him before calling police after mother’s abduction
Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly has said Savannah Guthrie told him about her mother, Nancy’s abduction before the information became public.

“I first learned of it before it became public. Savannah called me, because she knows I live here, and then I called the sheriff, and I called the Tucson Police chief,” Sen. Kelly told reporters.
“That was mid-afternoon on Sunday and Savannah was on the way to the airport to fly here,” he said, adding that the “Today” show host was “obviously rather upset” when she called him.
Describing Savannah as a “friend,” Sen. Kelly said that the case was in “very capable hands” with Pima County Sheriff’s Department and the FBI.
Savannah Guthrie’s offer to pay ransom sent ‘clear, unconditional’ signal to abductor: expert
By Ariel Zilber
An expert on kidnappings said Savannah Guthrie’s family’s latest video offering to pay ransom shows they are responding as if her mother Nancy Guthrie is alive and being held, calling it a clear, unconditional signal to whoever is on the other end.

Retired FBI agent Jason Pack, who has worked abduction cases, told The Post that the message released Saturday by Savannah Guthrie and her siblings Camron and Annie stripped away any ambiguity.
“That family got on camera and said ‘we will pay.’ No conditions, no fine print, no lawyers talking in circles,” Pack said.
“Just a mother’s children saying bring her home and we’ll do what we need to do.”
Savannah Guthrie says she has received message, begs for mom Nancy’s return in new video to abductor: ‘We will pay’
By Teresa Roca
Savannah Guthrie took to social media again with an emotional video in the disappearance of her mom, Nancy, begging the abductor to return her “valuable” mother Saturday and offering to pay a ransom.
“We received your message and we understand,” the “Today” anchor said on Instagram, alongside her brother Camron and sister Annie.

“We beg you now to return our mother to us, so that we can celebrate with her,” she added, later saying that her mother’s return is “very valuable to us” and “we will pay.”
Savannah Guthrie holds fast to her faith as mom’s life hangs in the balance
As Nancy Guthrie’s abduction nightmare stretches into a second week, “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie is desperately praying for her missing 84-year-old mother’s safe return — turning to her greatest source of hope and strength: the Bible.
“On Sundays, we’d spend all day at Casas Adobes Baptist Church for Sunday school, morning service, choir practice and night service,” Savannah told Guideposts, a non-denominational Christian magazine, in 2016.

“Faith was so woven into our daily lives, we liked to say that God was the sixth member of our family.”
Her mother, who was taken from her Tucson, Ariz. home on Jan. 31, was a no-nonsense single mom to Savannah and her two older siblings, Camron and Annie, after husband Charles suffered a fatal heart attack in 1988.
