The disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie from her Catalina Foothills home near Tucson, Arizona, has taken a dramatic new turn. What began as a baffling missing person case with ransom notes and a contaminated crime scene has now zeroed in on a potential suspect whose physical description, criminal background, and close ties to the family raise chilling questions.

Nancy, mother of Today show co-host Savannah Guthrie, was last seen on the evening of January 31, 2026, after dinner at her daughter Annie’s house. She returned home around 9:45 p.m. In the early hours of February 1, her Ring doorbell camera was deliberately disabled at 1:47 a.m. Motion was detected at 2:12 a.m., and her pacemaker signal stopped transmitting at 2:28 a.m. — the moment authorities believe the abduction occurred.

FBI-released footage shows a masked man, approximately 5’9″ to 5’10” tall with an average build, visible facial hair (mustache or goatee), wearing nitrile gloves, a black 25L Ozark Trail backpack, and a belly band holster concealing a handgun under a thick jacket. He is seen tampering with the camera before entering the property. Blood matching Nancy’s DNA was later found on the porch. Her purse, phone, and critical heart medications were left behind, indicating she did not leave voluntarily.

Ransom-style emails demanding millions in Bitcoin were sent to media outlets including TMZ starting February 1. The notes contained specific details, including references to events south of the border, suggesting possible multiple perpetrators or inside knowledge. No proof of life has ever been provided.

While the family — including son-in-law Tomaso Chioni — was initially scrutinized, height discrepancies ruled him out as the masked figure. Tomaso, a drummer, is noticeably taller. However, online investigators and public records have now connected the dots to another man: Dominic Aaron Lee Evans, a 47-year-old guitarist and longtime bandmate of Tomaso in the Tucson-based band “Early Black.”

Evans matches the suspect description almost perfectly: 5’9″–5’10”, athletic build, dark mustache and goatee. Band footage and photos reveal a possible tattoo on his wrist, which some analysts believe aligns with a marking visible on the intruder’s arm in enhanced FBI video. He has a documented criminal history in Pima County that includes felony burglary, robbery, theft, embezzlement, and DUI — crimes that eerily parallel elements of the abduction (unlawful entry, taking a person by force).

The two men have been friends and bandmates since at least 2007, a 19-year relationship that gave Evans intimate knowledge of the Guthrie family’s routines, home layout, camera system, finances, and vulnerabilities. Nancy suffered from limited mobility, chronic pain, and relied on daily heart medication — without which her condition could rapidly deteriorate. Evans has made no public statements, posted no messages of concern, and largely vanished from view since the disappearance.

A February 13 SWAT raid in Tucson detained several individuals, though not directly linked to Evans. Investigators recovered two separate DNA profiles: one from a glove found two miles away (unknown male, not in CODIS), and another from inside the home. Genetic genealogy is being pursued, similar to the Golden State Killer case. The black Ozark Trail backpack and possible gun purchases are also being traced through Walmart and local records.

Former FBI profiler Jim Clemente and hostage negotiator Chip Massie have analyzed the footage, noting the professional-level planning, possible reconnaissance (including a “backward walker” caught on camera days earlier on January 23), and the likelihood of an accomplice. Ransom expert David Leven highlighted the tipster emails as suggesting a hierarchy among perpetrators.

Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos has maintained that Nancy is likely being held locally and urged patience as thousands of tips and hours of surveillance footage are reviewed. The family has offered a substantial reward and continues public appeals through Savannah Guthrie. Yet as of early April 2026 — more than 65 days later — no arrest has been made and Nancy remains missing.

The connection to the Tucson music scene adds another layer of intrigue. Evans has lived in the southern Arizona area for decades, including properties near Rio Rico, close to the Mexican border — a route reachable in under an hour from the foothills. Cell tower data and Bluetooth tracking from Nancy’s pacemaker have been utilized in searches.

This development forces difficult conversations about trust within extended families and how long-term friendships can conceal darker motives. Tomaso Chioni has faced repeated FBI visits to his home, and questions linger about power of attorney arrangements and financial oversight within the family.

While authorities have not officially named Evans as a suspect, the alignment of physical description, criminal record, proximity, and silence has made him impossible for serious investigators to ignore. DNA results, expected to provide further clarity, could prove decisive.

For the Guthrie family, every day without answers deepens the agony. Nancy, a beloved grandmother in fragile health, is somewhere without her medication in the Arizona desert or beyond. The masked man captured on her own doorbell camera may no longer be anonymous — but until justice is served, the nightmare continues.

The public continues to watch closely, submitting tips and speculating on forums. In an era where doorbell footage and public records can expose hidden connections, this case serves as a stark reminder that sometimes the greatest threats come not from strangers, but from those who know you best.