Blood evidence at Nancy Guthrie's front door suggests a lone attacker, retired FBI profiler says

 April 29, 2026

Blood droplets on Nancy Guthrie's front porch tell the story of a woman who fought back, and lost. A retired FBI profiler now says the pattern of that blood points to a single abductor who struck the 84-year-old near her front door, knocked her to the ground, and then carried her away into the dark.

Jim Clemente, a retired FBI Supervisory Special Agent, told Fox News Digital that the blood spatter outside Guthrie's home in Tucson's Catalina Foothills neighborhood is consistent with a violent confrontation at the threshold, and inconsistent with two or more people seizing her at once.

Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of "Today" co-host Savannah Guthrie, vanished under suspicious circumstances on Feb. 1. She had lived in the Catalina Foothills home for decades. Sources with knowledge of the case previously told Fox News Digital there were no signs of a struggle inside the residence. The violence, Clemente believes, happened right at the front door.

What the blood drops reveal

After authorities released the crime scene, video taken of the porch showed a concentration of blood drops near the mat at Guthrie's front door. The trail grew thinner along the walkway and ended where the path meets the edge of the driveway.

Clemente walked through the evidence in detail. He told Fox News Digital that the droplet pattern suggests Guthrie was struck in the nose or mouth, fell to her knees or to the ground, aspirated, and then coughed up blood that dripped around the same spot:

"If there was no blood spatter pattern inside the house, then outside by the front door or while she was going through the door this is where she put up a fight or refused to go any further."

That reading matters because it narrows the field. If two people had hold of Guthrie, Clemente said, she never would have hit the ground at all.

"It rules out more than one person because if two people had control of her as they were leaving the house she would never have fallen to the ground. They would have been in control of her body and prevented her from resisting and fighting and falling after she was struck in the face."

The former profiler also noted that the larger droplets are low-velocity blood spatter that fell directly from her mouth. Her face, he said, was pointing straight down, within inches of the ground, when she coughed up the smaller, medium-velocity droplets. The lack of directionality in the spatter told him she was not moving fast at the time.

The investigation into Guthrie's disappearance has drawn national attention, and the FBI has taken over DNA testing as the case has stretched on without an arrest.

Carried away, face up

Clemente identified what he called a contradiction in the evidence, one that actually sharpens the picture. The blood near the door fell straight down, meaning Guthrie was stationary. But the trail between the door and the driveway is thin, with no directional tails on the drops. His conclusion: someone picked her up and carried her face-up to a waiting vehicle.

"So there is a contradiction in the evidence. I believe this was caused by the fact that she was carried from that first location to the car with her face up so only a minimum amount of blood was deposited on the walkway."

He added that the transfer was not done at high speed, because a fast movement would have left blood drops with tails showing the direction of travel. The picture Clemente paints is methodical: a single person who struck Guthrie, waited while she fell, then lifted her and walked her to a car without rushing.

Authorities, for their part, have said they have not ruled out the possibility that multiple people could have been involved in the suspected kidnapping. Clemente's analysis, while informed by decades of FBI casework, represents his professional interpretation of publicly available evidence, not an official law-enforcement finding.

Forensic pathologist backs abduction theory

Clemente is not the only expert to weigh in. Famed forensic pathologist Dr. Michael Baden previously told Fox News Digital that he suspected the blood drops came from Guthrie's hands or face. The New York Post reported that DNA analysis confirmed the blood belonged to Nancy Guthrie, and that photos showed droplets both in front of her door and in the driveway.

Baden described the droplet shapes as telling:

"The nature of the blood spots with little pale centers or donut shapes are typical for drops that come from the nose or mouth, because they're mixed with air."

He left no room for an innocent explanation. "These are not innocent droplets," Baden said. "From the shape, number of droplets and the place of the droplets outside the house on the porch, they are entirely consistent and indicative of occurring during an abduction."

Questions about the detective bureau leading the investigation have added to public frustration with the pace of the case.

Gloves, cameras, and a pacemaker

The blood evidence fits into a broader set of disturbing details. The Washington Examiner reported that the FBI has offered a $50,000 reward for information leading to Guthrie's recovery or the arrest of those involved. Sheriff Chris Nanos confirmed DNA testing showed the porch blood belonged to Guthrie. Investigators also disclosed that her doorbell camera was removed and disconnected at 1:47 a.m. and her pacemaker disconnected from her personal phone at 2:28 a.m., a sequence that suggests deliberate preparation by whoever took her.

FBI special agent Heith Janke offered a grim assessment: "We talked about there has been no proof of life." Sheriff Nanos said simply, "Nancy is still out there."

Separately, a Tucson couple found what appeared to be blood-stained gloves in the desert less than a mile from Guthrie's neighborhood on Feb. 11. One glove appeared ripped and bore what looked like blood near the wrist and pointer finger. Newsmax reported that the Pima County Sheriff's Department said detectives and agents have collected multiple gloves from the area, with forensic analysis ongoing.

But that lead, too, has stalled. AP News reported that DNA recovered from gloves found about two miles from Guthrie's home produced no matches in the national CODIS database. The gloves appeared to match those worn by a masked man with a backpack captured on porch camera video near her home. Investigators said additional DNA evidence from the residence is being analyzed and may be submitted to genetic genealogy databases.

Meanwhile, the FBI has been testing a DNA hair sample recovered from the Tucson home as the investigation crawls past the four-month mark without a named suspect.

A $1.2 million reward and no answers

A combined reward of more than $1.2 million now stands for information that cracks the case. Anyone with information is asked to call 1-800-CALL-FBI.

The public facts paint a picture of an elderly woman taken from her own home in the middle of the night by someone who disabled her security, struck her at the door, and drove away. Two nationally recognized forensic experts agree the blood evidence is consistent with a violent abduction. The gloves found nearby matched a figure caught on camera. And yet months later, no arrest. No suspect named. No proof of life.

Speculation about possible motives has ranged widely, with one former FBI agent floating a religious motive theory, a sign of how little concrete information investigators have shared publicly.

An 84-year-old woman who lived quietly in the same neighborhood for decades deserves better than an investigation that produces more questions than answers. So do the people watching this case and wondering whether the system meant to protect them actually can.

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