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Nancy Guthrie neighbors' Ring camera captures vehicles on possible route from crime scene

Three weeks after Nancy Guthrie's suspected Tucson abduction, no suspects identified. Neighbors provide Ring footage that police hadn't collected yet.

U.S. NewsBy Wire ServicesFebruary 26, 20265 min read

Last updated: April 4, 2026, 12:07 PM

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Nancy Guthrie neighbors' Ring camera captures vehicles on possible route from crime scene

Homeowner says authorities never canvassed their neighborhood despite living on back road near Nancy Guthrie's home

Video Ring video shows vehicles on outskirts of Nancy Guthrie's neighborhood morning of abduction Homeowners on Camino Real, a backroad out of the Catalina Foothills, say they have a camera facing the street that was not previously checked by authorities. (Credit: Courtesy of Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas)

EXCLUSIVE: TUCSON, Ariz. — A resident in the Catalina Foothills neighborhood has a street-facing Ring camera that caught 12 cars passing by on the morning of Nancy Guthrie’s suspected abduction.

The recordings took place between midnight and 6 a.m. on Feb. 1, and some of the activity occurred near the 2:30 a.m. mark, which is around the time authorities said the 84-year-old Guthrie's pacemaker device last synced with her iPhone.

The homeowners, Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas, told Fox News Digital that police had not canvassed their neighborhood in the 25 days since Guthrie is believed to have been taken from her bed in a home invasion kidnapping. The FBI and Pima County Sheriff's Department have been alerted to the video. It was not immediately clear whether the video is of any use to the investigation or whether the vehicle had ever been on Guthrie's street.

Left: A still image from Ring camera video shows a vehicle passing a home near Nancy Guthrie's on Feb. 1, the morning she is believed to have been abducted. Right: Nancy in an undated family photo. (Courtesy of Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas, Courtesy of NBC)

Guthrie is the mother of "Today" co-host Savannah Guthrie, a Tucson native.

The Stratigouleas house is on a back road that leads out of Guthrie’s neighborhood, avoiding major intersections. And they live about 2.5 miles away from the crime scene, which is outside the 2-mile radius of neighbors who received a Ring alert asking for video taken from Jan. 1 to Feb. 2.

Their house is roughly a seven-minute drive from Guthrie's address, according to Google Maps. One of their videos was recorded at around 2:36 a.m. on Feb. 1, which is roughly eight minutes after Guthrie's pacemaker last synced with her iPhone, according to the sheriff's timeline.

Danielle Stratigouleas said the number of cars passing that night was not unusual, but she and a friend found it "odd" that no one from law enforcement had visited her neighborhood.

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A Ring camera image taken from video shows a vehicle driving south on Camino Real at 2:36 a.m. on Feb. 1, the morning Nancy Guthrie is believed to have been abducted from a home nearby in the Catalina Foothills of Tucson, Arizona. (Courtesy of Elias and Danielle Stratigouleas)

The FBI and Pima County Sheriff's Department have been alerted to the video. It was not immediately clear whether it is of any use to the investigation.

But the route itself had been flagged to Fox News Digital by another neighbor — who said she also saw a suspicious man walking in the area on Feb. 2, around the corner from what appeared to be an abandoned car. The young mother asked not to be named due to concerns for her children's safety amid the unsolved kidnapping investigation.

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She described him as about 5 feet, 9 inches tall, Hispanic, with a close-trimmed beard and wearing a silver bracelet. He was smoking a cigarette near the intersection of Camino Juan Paisano and Piedra Seca, which is between Camino Real and Guthrie's home.

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department did not return multiple phone calls and emails about the man or the vehicle, a dark red Honda SUV that the neighbor said was moved after three days.

A neighbor of Nancy Guthrie's spotted this dark red Honda near Camino Real on Feb. 2, the day after Nancy Guthrie's suspected abduction nearby. She told Fox News Digital that it remained in place for a couple of days after deputies examined it. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)

A neighbor of Nancy Guthrie's spotted this dark red Honda near Camino Real on Feb. 2, the day after Nancy Guthrie's suspected abduction nearby. She told Fox News Digital it remained in place for about three days before it was moved. (Obtained by Fox News Digital)

Another unidentified man was spotted in mid-January, according to neighbor Aldine Meister.

"He didn’t have your typical walking gear on, and he had his hat pulled really far over his eyes," she told Fox News Digital.

She said she saw the man walking in the neighborhood, near an intersection leading to Guthrie’s home — and hadn't encountered him before or after.

Deputies examine a flyer taped to Nancy Guthrie's mailbox on Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026. (Michael Ruiz/Fox News Digital)

"He was kind of younger, and he just didn’t look like he was going out for a walk," she added.

She mentioned it to her husband but did not report it to investigators until after Guthrie's disappearance.

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