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The sheriff leading the investigation in the Nancy Guthrie case is facing bipartisan calls for removal from the county board of supervisors. A Democrat and a Republican plan to move to vacate Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos’ office next week over allegations he lied about a history of suspensions and other disciplinary actions he received in the 1970s and 1980s as a member of the El Paso Police Department. “This is accountability for a guy who has evaded accountability for decades and is himself a public safety threat,” said Dr. Matt Heinz, a member of the Pima County Board of Supervisors.

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Justice or Deception? The Hidden Past of the Sheriff Leading the Nancy Guthrie Case

The disappearance of Nancy Guthrie sent shockwaves through Pima County. As a beloved member of the community, her kidnapping became the top priority for local law enforcement. At the center of this high-stakes investigation stood Sheriff Chris Nanos, a veteran lawman who projected an image of authority and unbreakable integrity. But as the search for Nancy intensified, a different kind of investigation was quietly brewing—one that targeted the Sheriff himself.

A Rare Bipartisan Strike

In a political climate often defined by division, a shocking alliance formed within the Pima County Board of Supervisors. Both a Democrat and a Republican member reached a grim conclusion: the man leading the hunt for Nancy Guthrie was no longer fit for office. Next week, they plan to file a formal motion to vacate Sheriff Nanos’ position, a move that has sent the local government into a tailspin.

The move isn’t based on the progress of the Guthrie case, but rather on what Nanos allegedly did—and didn’t say—about his own past.

The Ghosts of El Paso

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