A former top FBI official is casting serious doubt on whether Savannah Guthrie’s missing 84-year-old mother is actually the victim of a kidnapping at all, raising the unsettling possibility that something far more complicated — or far more deceptive — may be unfolding behind the scenes.
Chris Swecker, who previously served as assistant director of the FBI, said he is highly skeptical that Nancy Guthrie is alive and being held by abductors, despite ransom messages and emotional public pleas from the “Today” show anchor and her siblings.
“I’m very skeptical of this,” Swecker said during an appearance Sunday on Fox News’ “The Big Weekend Show.” He didn’t mince words. “Is this really a kidnapping? Does somebody really have her, and is she really alive?”
Swecker’s comments came after Savannah Guthrie and her two siblings released videos appealing directly to the person or people claiming to have taken their mother, agreeing publicly to pay up to $6 million for her return. The family’s emotional outreach drew national attention — but Swecker says key elements of a legitimate kidnapping case are conspicuously missing.
“If this was a kidnapping, it would be a very simple matter to authenticate and provide proof of life,” he explained, noting that no evidence has been credibly verified so far. According to Swecker, that absence alone should raise alarms for investigators and the public alike.
Former FBI Assistant Director Chris Swecker isn’t the only one questioning whether Nancy Guthrie was truly “kidnapped”
Many of us have questioned that description of the crime
The absence of “proof of life” & the delay in sending a “ransom note” have been suspicious all along pic.twitter.com/D45ZfvSZmP
— Phil Holloway
(@PhilHollowayEsq) February 9, 2026
Is the narrative of a kidnapping in Nancy Guthrie's case credible?
He also flagged the rapidly escalating ransom demands as another red flag. Initial reports indicated kidnappers demanded $1 million. Within days, that figure reportedly ballooned to $6 million.
“Remember now, it was 1 million not too long ago. All of a sudden, it’s 6 million,” Swecker said. “That’s not typical.”
Instead, Swecker suggested authorities must seriously consider the possibility that opportunists are exploiting the family’s fear and public profile rather than carrying out an organized abduction. “You have to allow for the possibility that this was something more or something other than a kidnapping,” he said.
At least two alleged ransom messages have surfaced since Nancy Guthrie vanished from her Tucson, Arizona, home earlier this month. One note, sent to multiple media outlets, outlined two deadlines — the first already passed, and the second set for Monday, according to FBI officials.
Meanwhile, law enforcement activity around Guthrie’s home has intensified, including forensic searches that have only fueled speculation. Investigators have not confirmed the authenticity of the ransom communications or provided evidence that Nancy Guthrie is alive.
As public sympathy for the Guthrie family grows, Swecker’s warning introduces a sobering reality: not every disappearance fits the narrative it first appears to present — and in high-profile cases, misinformation can be just as dangerous as silence.














(@PhilHollowayEsq)
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