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Savannah Guthrie visited her mom Nancy Guthrie’s home on Monday, one month after the 84-year-old went missing. Savannah, her sister Annie Guthrie and brother-in-law Tommaso Cioni, visited the Tucson property together for the first time since she went missing on Feb. 1. Video from NewsNation shows the three hugging as they look at a tribute created near Nancy’s mailbox. They added yellow flowers to the display. In an Instagram post, Savannah wrote: We feel the love and prayers from our neighbors, from the Tucson community and from around the country. Please don’t stop praying and hoping with us. Being her home.

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The Search for Nancy Guthrie: A Daughter’s Vigil and a Community’s Hope
The desert landscape of Tucson, Arizona, is known for its rugged beauty and stillness. However, for the family of television icon Savannah Guthrie, that stillness has become a haunting reminder of an ongoing mystery. On a recent Monday, the silence of a quiet Tucson street was broken by a somber homecoming. Savannah Guthrie, alongside her sister Annie and brother-in-law Tommaso Cioni, returned to their mother Nancy Guthrie’s residence for the first time since she vanished.

It has been over a month since the 84-year-old matriarch was last seen on February 1. In the digital age, where news cycles move at the speed of light, the Guthrie family is fighting to keep the spotlight on a case that grows more urgent with every passing hour.

A Heartbreaking Return to Tucson
The image of the three family members embracing in front of Nancy’s home—captured in the file 644228779_1460468575635964_5267045373595703985_n.jpg—tells a story of profound grief and unwavering solidarity. Standing near the mailbox where Nancy used to collect her daily post, Savannah, Annie, and Tommaso stood in a tight circle, a visual representation of a family leaning on one another to survive the unthinkable.

The visit was more than just a check-in on a property; it was a pilgrimage. Near the mailbox, a makeshift memorial had been meticulously crafted by the local community. It serves as a “tribute” to a woman who was clearly a beloved fixture in her neighborhood. During their visit, the family added yellow flowers to the display—a color long associated with the “Tie a Yellow Ribbon” tradition, symbolizing the hope for a loved one’s safe return.

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