TUCSON, Ariz. (AP) — The disappearance of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie’s mother three weeks ago has inspired a small number of volunteers to launch their own searches in the dense desert near her home in hopes of cracking the case.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Department said while it appreciates the concern for Nancy Guthrie, it asked people inquiring about volunteering to give investigators space to do their jobs.
“We all want to find Nancy, but this work is best left to professionals,” the agency said in a statement over the weekend.
Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance
Nancy Guthrie, 84, was last seen at her home just outside Tucson on Jan. 31 and was reported missing the following day. Authorities believe she was kidnapped, abducted or otherwise taken against her will. Drops of her blood were found on the front porch, but authorities haven’t publicly revealed much evidence.
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Despite the sheriff’s request for people not to search on their own, volunteers have continued to look. A small group reported finding a black backpack on Sunday, but it wasn’t the same brand as one identified in video surveillance that the FBI released of a masked person at Guthrie’s home the night she disappeared.
A sheriff’s spokesperson told Tucson television station KOLD that the bag and its contents didn’t appear to be viable leads. The Associated Press reached out to the sheriff’s department for comment on Monday.
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A memorial grows outside the home of Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, on Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Felicia Fonseca)
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A memorial grows outside the home of Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, on Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Felicia Fonseca)
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Volunteers begin to search
Two women from the group Madres Buscadoras de Sonora, or “Searching Mothers of Sonora,” who were carrying digging tools Sunday outside of Guthrie’s home, said they, too, would join the search. They posted fliers on Guthrie’s mailbox with her picture and their contact information.
Lupita Tello, who joined the group after her son disappeared in Mexico in 2020, said Monday she and two other volunteers will continue to post flyers on bus stops and utility poles near Nancy Guthrie’s home. Members of the group plan to do the same in Nogales, Mexico.
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She said the group was contacted by a friend of one of Nancy Guthrie’s daughters who asked them for help because of their experience. The group has found the remains of more than 5,000 people in Mexico since it was started 10 years ago by mothers with missing children.
“We know the soil. We know when someone has dug deep or when there is a shallow grave,” Tello said. “We hope we can help because we understand the pain of having a missing relative.”
She said group members have received training by Mexican forensic experts on how to conduct their searches.
The sheriff’s department said in a statement late Monday that it’s aware of differences in the masked person’s clothing depicted in various images that were released, namely with and without a backpack.
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“There is no date or time stamp associated with these images,” the department said. “Therefore, any suggestion that the photographs were taken on different days is purely speculative.”
Authorities say search parties need to coordinate
Tony Estrada, the former long-time sheriff in neighboring Santa Cruz County, said volunteer searchers have good intentions in wanting to help and can serve as a force multiplier, but it’s crucial that their efforts be coordinated with law enforcement.
“You can’t have people all over the place looking for something and not reporting to anybody or letting them know that they’re going to be in that area,” Estrada said. “They may be trampling into things that may come out to be helpful in the future.”
Nearly all search operations for U.S. law enforcement agencies are staffed with volunteers, said Chris Boyer, executive director of the National Association for Search and Rescue.
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Untrained volunteers who show up to help in a search may mean well, but experts say they could end up contaminating a crime scene.
“It’s painful for law enforcement when that happens,” Boyer said.
Volunteers should undergo background checks, be trained in things like administering first aid and preserving crime scenes, and work under the direction of law enforcement authorities, said Boyer, whose group provides education, certification and advocacy for search and rescue efforts across the United States and other countries.
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A memorial grows outside the home of Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Felicia Fonseca)
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A memorial grows outside the home of Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Felicia Fonseca)
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Hundreds are working on the investigation
Several hundred people are working the Guthrie investigation, and more than 20,000 tips have been received, the sheriff’s office has said. The FBI and other agencies are assisting.
The sheriff’s office has watched around the clock lately at Guthrie’s house. It also enacted a temporary one-way flow on the road so that emergency vehicles and trash collection trucks could get through. The constant presence of news crews, bloggers and curious onlookers has drawn mixed reaction from neighbors.
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Some appreciated the attention the case has been getting. Others have placed traffic cones and signs on their properties to keep people off.
Meanwhile, the tribute to Nancy Guthrie outside her home keeps growing, with flowers, yellow ribbons, crosses, prayers and patron saints for older adults and in desperate situations.
Aran Aleamoni and his daughter Ariana picked out a bouquet of red, pink and white flowers and placed them at the edge of Guthrie’s yard, alongside a sign that read “Let Nancy Come Home” and a statuette of an angel.
“My heart goes out to the entire family,” said Aran Aleamoni, who has known the Guthrie family for a long time. “We are all pulling for you. We’re with you in your corner.”
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Billeaud reported from Phoenix. Associated Press writer Olga R. Rodríguez in San Francisco contributed to this story.
PARIS (AP) — France’s spat with the U.S. ambassador to Paris took another turn Tuesday with the French foreign minister saying the top U.S. diplomat in France must respond to a summons and won’t have access to French government officials until he complies.
French authorities had summoned Ambassador Charles Kushner — the father of U.S. President Donald Trump’s son-in-law and adviser Jared Kushner — for a meeting on Monday evening over comments from the Trump administration that France objected to. French diplomats said Kushner did not show up.
Speaking Tuesday, French Foreign Minister Jean-Noël Barrot described the failure to attend the meeting as “a surprise” that flew in the face of diplomatic protocol and will dent Charles Kushner’s ability to serve as an ambassador.
“It will, naturally, affect his capacity to exercise his mission in our country,” Barrot said, speaking to public broadcaster France Info.
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He said that Kushner “is bringing difficulties on himself. Because for an ambassador to be able to do his job he needs access to members of the government. That’s the basics.”
“When these explanations have taken place, then the U.S. ambassador in France will, naturally, regain access to members of the French government,” the minister said.
The U.S. Embassy did not respond to an Associated Press request for comment on Monday and a follow-up request on Tuesday morning also got no immediate reply.
France’s foreign ministry had summoned Kushner over Trump administration tweets relating to the beating death in France of a far-right activist, Quentin Deranque. The 23-year-old student, described as a fervent nationalist, was beaten by a group of people earlier this month in the city of Lyon, in fighting that erupted between far-left and far-right activists. He later died of brain injuries.
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In a post last week on X, the State Department’s Counterterrorism Bureau said “violent radical leftism is on the rise and its role in Quentin Deranque’s death demonstrates the threat it poses to public safety.”
The U.S. Embassy in Paris posted the same statement, in French.
Barrot said France needs to discuss the comments with Kushner.
“We must have an explanation with him,” Barrot said. “We don’t accept that foreign countries can come and interfere, invite themselves, into the national political debate.”
A new car and engine partnership with Honda that struggles for reliability and performance and has Alonso as one of the drivers. If that sounds familiar, it’s because it is.
In 2015, Alonso joined McLaren from Ferrari wooed by the promise of Honda’s potential. That potential was eventually realised – but not until 2020-21, by which time Honda and McLaren had long since split and Honda had joined forces with Red Bull.
Alonso’s career, meanwhile, became a kind of living purgatory. One of the greatest drivers the sport has ever known reduced to fighting for scraps, making up his own targets for motivation, rather than what he should have been gunning for – wins and titles in F1.
He last won a race in May 2013, and he is now 44. But his performances have continued on a high level, and the respect he has from his peers on the grid is higher than ever. For his talent, and his ability to keep up his motivation in the face of everything.
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The Newey-Honda-Aston Martin combination on paper promised Alonso something positive, a last hope of a return to success with which to bring his storied career to a close. Either this year, when his current contract runs out, or perhaps after one more, if glory seemed tangible.
Instead, he has found himself transported back in time 10 years.
Alonso has waited an entire career to work with Newey, the excellence of whose cars – and some terrible luck – have denied the Spaniard at least two further world titles that he should have won.
Alonso won’t doubt Newey can sort this out. Who would? But after his experiences with Honda last time, can he really convince himself it can turn this around in the limited time he surely still has available?
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In public, Alonso is staying hopeful, just as he did with McLaren and Honda, bar one or two public slips when it all got too much.
“Everything can be fixed, for sure,” he says. “Short and medium term. I don’t think there is anything that is impossible to fix.
“We will try to fix everything we can before Australia and after that we try to fix as many things as possible in the first couple of races. Because [otherwise] it’s too late in the championship. But no, I’m optimistic. I think there is a solution in place.”
Alonso’s partner Melissa Jimenez is expecting their first child in late March.
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The emergence of the unfolding catastrophe that is Aston Martin-Honda is so recent he has not yet been asked about his thoughts on his future. But he will already be considering what to do.
Does he roll the dice one last time, try to summon the energy and commitment to go again after what will doubtless be a very trying year? Or call it quits?
The comedian and actor appeared at Southwark Crown Court on Tuesday morning
Russell Brand appeared at court on Tuesday morning, where he pleaded not guilty to two further sexual offences.
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The 50-year-old comedian and actor denied one count of rape and one count of sexual assault during an appearance at Southwark Crown Court today, February 24. Both offences were alleged to have taken place in 2009 in London.
Brand, of Oxfordshire, previously denied two counts of rape, one count of indecent assault and two counts of sexual assault in relation to alleged offences between 1999 and 2005, involving four women.
Wearing a leopard print shirt with a number of buttons undone, and holding a white hat, Brand spoke to confirm his name and his not guilty pleas from the dock.
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A trial is scheduled to begin at Southwark Crown Court later this year in relation to the five original charges.
Russian soldiers have exposed the brutality of conditions on the Russian side of the front lines in Ukraine, with two men telling the BBC they saw soldiers being executed on the spot for refusing orders.
The men, who are on the run, spoke about the horror they witnessed from an undisclosed location outside Russia in the documentary, “The Zero Line: Inside Russia’s War”.
Ilya, 35, taught children with special needs before he was drafted into the army for the war. He says he saw four people being shot at point-blank range by a commander – an act known as Zeroing in Russian military slang – because they had fled the front line and refused to return.
Zeroing is usually carried out as punishment for refusing orders, and acts as a means of intimidation for others who may be thinking of doing the same, the men told us.
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Another man, Dima, who also witnessed the executions, said commanders killing their own men was “a normal thing”.
“I see it – just two metres, three metres. Just murders, just click, clack, bang. It’s not a drama, it’s not a movie, it’s a real life,” he says.
The Russian government says its armed forces “operate with utmost restraint, as far as possible under the conditions of a high-intensity conflict, treating their personnel with maximum care”. “Information regarding alleged violations and crimes is duly investigated,” it added.“We are unable to independently verify the accuracy or authenticity of the information you have provided,” it said.
Amanda Smith spent 24 years in limbo, after her mother seemingly vanished into thin air back in 2001 – but now it’s been revealed that Michele Hundley Smith is, in fact, alive and well
When Amanda Smith and her siblings said goodbye to their mum who was popping out to do some Christmas shopping in 2001, they had no idea that they would never see her again.
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For 24 agonising years, Amanda campaigned relentlessly to find Michele Hundley Smith, but all this time, her mother had been living a double life. She has now been left reeling after finding out her mother is “alive and well” but just did not want to be found.
Michele, now 62, has told authorities she does not want her family to be given her location – or for her whereabout to be released, and Amanda released a heartbreaking statement on the Facebook page she has run dedicated to finding her missing mum. She said that since finding out her mother was alive, but did not want to see her family, she has been going through a “whirlwind of emotions”.
She admitted that she was both “ecstatic” to find out her mother is well, but also furious at what she and her siblings, who were seven, 14 and 19 at the time Michele walked out of the door and never came home, have been put through in the years since – constantly questioning what might have happened to their mum.
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Michele’s disappearance was thoroughly investigated by both the police and the FBI at the time she vanished from her home in North Carolina, but her family still have few answers about why she left, and why she has only just revealed she is all right.
In her candid statement, Amanda admitted that her family will likely all have different responses to this update, and that they are all individuals who are entitled to their feelings after being kept in the dark for so long. However, her pain at the conflict she feels herself was palpable. “I am heartbroken, I am all over the map,” she wrote. “Will I have a relationship once more with my mom? Honestly I can’t answer that because I don’t even know…
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“My initial reaction would be yes absolutely but then I think of all the hurt.” However, Amanda writes with great empathy, “My mom is only human just as we all are.”
She adds that she can “absolutely understand taking off and leaving” but that doesn’t mean, in her view, Michele “gets off scot free without accountability or responsibility”. Amanda also pointed out that she shares some coping mechanisms with her mum. “I am a runner as well and while this isn’t something to be proud of at all, it’s a part of being human. Each one of us humans have our faults, we each have a shadow part and we each deserve the chance to better ourselves and to heal from our past.”
Amanda also fiercely defended her father in her statement, hitting back at speculation that had been levied at him that he might have been the reason that Michele chose to make herself disappear.
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The Facebook page where Amanda posted the statement had provided details of the disappearance, including that she had been driving a forest-green 1995 Pontiac Trans Sport van, which was never found. It also showed how desperately some of the family believed that Michele had not gone of her own volition: Michele would have “never left her children by choice”.
However, in 2020, Amanda told Dateline that her father had a far more sinister theory. “He believes she just took off and left him, and us, that night,” she told the programme – now it seems he was correct in his prediciton.
Amanda admitted back in that interview that it was “possible” her mum had left of her own free will, and that it was “hard to rule out that she just left all of us and started a new life”. However, she said that “there’s also something that nags at me that something happened to her on her way back home”.
The Rockingham County Sheriff’s Office said in a statement that they had discovered Michele is “alive and well” but that she does not want her location to be shared with anyone.
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Her cousin, Barbara Byrd told local news station WFMYNews2 that this had not been totally easy to hear. “I kind of want to go outside and scream ‘she’s alive, she’s alive’. For years, we didn’t know if we were grieving or waiting… My biggest question is to her ‘What happened all those years ago in December? What made you leave? What happened?”
She continued: “I understand and respect that she doesn’t want any of us to contact her. I’m not angry. The biggest answer I had today was she was alive. Nothing else matters right at this moment.”
For me, it was relying on the goodwill of friends’ parents, sleeping in cars and wandering around town centres until the early hours in a bid to stay awake.
Not long after my sixteenth birthday, I left home involuntarily after my family relationship broke down.
For the first few months, I crashed on friends’ bedroom floors and on a camp bed in my boyfriend’s conservatory after his mum reluctantly agreed to help.
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The nights when I had nowhere to go would be spent walking around town centres and jumping on and off the Metrolink, hoping that the ticket inspectors weren’t on shift.
I secured a dubious ‘commission only’ sales job and found a room in a house share.
This didn’t last long due to the sporadic low payments, and I found myself once again facing homelessness.
I went back to ‘sofa surfing’ and slept in friends’ cars (I wasn’t even old enough to drive myself) before presenting to the council, who found me accommodation.
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The Greater Manchester council estate I’d grown up on was notoriously ‘rough’, but I made plenty of friends there – until my parents separated when I was around 11 and years of instability followed.
We bounced from one private rented house to another, even ending up in a domestic abuse refuge for a while.
This meant sharing a bedroom with my parent and two siblings, and a living room, bathroom and kitchen with complete strangers.
In the background, I struggled my way through high school, leaving with three GCSEs and no career path ahead of me.
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Instead, I worked night shifts in a care home and various retail jobs to make ends meet.
By the time I was in my mid-20s, I found myself back in the same situation when my own marriage ended, and I had nowhere to go, once again relying on the kindness of others to try and find my feet with nothing but a cheap used car and a few bags of personal possessions to my name.
Even now, more than two decades later, the insecurity and fear of not having a place to call home all those years ago have stayed with me.
It’s almost impossible to think about the future, about building a career and ‘improving’ your situation while living in survival mode and fighting daily to retain any shred of dignity.
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Those who don’t know my past are often surprised to learn of it, given that I’m now a middle-aged homeowner with a full-time job and secure family life.
But that’s the point – it really can happen to anyone.
Centrepoint is the UK’s leading youth homelessness charity, supporting more than 16,000 people aged 16 to 25 into housing and employment each year.
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My own experience took place in a time prior to mobile phones or accessible internet.
I only wish I had known about fantastic support services like this that are making a real difference to the lives of young people.
Richard Duggan, Regional Editor North West, will join our colleagues across the region in supporting Centrepoint’s campaign to end youth homelessness by 2037.
A man who carried out “horrific” sexual crimes against vulnerable people with dementia has been jailed for over 20 years. Joshua Springer was handed a 21-year sentence after appearing at Lincoln Crown Court on Friday (February 20).
The 36-year-old was also given a sexual harm prevention order for the rest of his life. Springer, formerly of Cornstall Buildings in Stamford near the Cambridgeshire border, previously pleaded guilty to nine charges of rape at the same court on December 2, 2025.
His offences were against three victims suffering from dementia at a residential care home for elderly people in the Stamford area. A fourth victim was in the North Yorkshire area. Of Springer’s nine charges, six were evenly split between three women at the Stamford care home, while the remaining three charges were connected to a fourth woman in North Yorkshire.
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The care home and area in Yorkshire are not being named to protect the anonymity of the victims. Springer was also sentenced for making indecent images of children, to which he also pleaded guilty.
Detective chief inspector Jennifer Lovatt, of the East Midlands Special Operations Unit, said: “While Springer has been sentenced for his horrific crimes, that does not mean that our investigations have stopped. [The] result shows that offenders will be brought to justice, so if you think you have been affected, please get in touch.”
DCI Lovatt is appealing for anyone else that may have been a victim of Springer, who is also known as Joshua Kearney and Joshua Kearney Springer, to contact police. The DCI added: “Our team has worked tirelessly for some time in bringing Springer to justice, and there may be other potential victims who perhaps have not yet come forward.
“I’d encourage them to contact us – you can call 101 (ask for Lincolnshire Police) and quote Incident 272 of November 28. If you want to remain anonymous, then you can call Crimestoppers on 0800 555 111.”
KYIV, Ukraine (AP) — More than a dozen senior European officials arrived in the Ukrainian capital on Tuesday in a show of support on the fourth anniversary of Russia’s all-out invasion of Ukraine — a grim anniversary in a war that has killed tens of thousands of people and put European leaders on edge about the scale of Moscow’s ambitions on the continent.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said his country has withstood the onslaught by Russia’s bigger and better equipped army, which over the past year of fighting captured just 0.79% of Ukraine’s territory, according to the Institute for the Study of War, a Washington-based think tank.
“Looking back at the beginning of the invasion and reflecting on today, we have every right to say: we have defended our independence, we have not lost our statehood,” Zelenskyy said on social media, adding that Russian President Vladimir Putin has “not achieved his goals.”
“He has not broken Ukrainians; he has not won this war,” Zelenskyy also said.
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However, as the corrosive war of attrition enters its fifth year, a U.S.-led diplomatic push to end Europe’s biggest armed conflict since World War II appears no closer to finding compromises that might make a peace deal possible.
Negotiations are stuck on what happens to the Donbas, eastern Ukraine’s industrial heartland which Russian forces mostly occupy but have failed to seize completely, and the terms of a postwar security arrangement that Kyiv is demanding to deter any future Russian invasion.
The number of soldiers killed, injured or missing on both sides could reach 2 million by spring, with Russia sustaining the largest number of troop deaths for any major power in any conflict since World War II, a report last month from the Center for Strategic and International Studies estimated.
European leaders see their countries’ own security at stake in Ukraine amid concerns about Putin’s wider goals and has demanded its leaders be consulted in the ongoing U.S.-brokered talks.
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German Chancellor Friedrich Merz wrote on X that “for four years, every day and every night has been a nightmare for the Ukrainians — and not just for them, but for us all. Because war is back in Europe.”
“We will only end it by being strong together, because the fate of Ukraine is our fate,” he added.
The war has drawn in countries far beyond Ukraine, giving the conflict a global dimension, and threatened to worsen shortages, hunger and political instability in developing countries.
While NATO countries have come to Ukraine’s aid, Russia has been helped by North Korea, which has sent troops and artillery shells; Iran, which has provided drone technology; and China, which the United States and analysts say has provided machine tools and chips.
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Among the European officials visiting Kyiv on Tuesday were the President of the European Council, Antonio Costa, the President of the European Commission Ursula von der Leyen and Finnish President Alexander Stubb, as well as seven prime ministers and three foreign ministers.
With Ukraine unable to sustain its fight against Russia without foreign help, NATO countries are now providing military help, purchasing American weapons after the Trump administration broke with earlier Washington policy and stopped giving arms to Kyiv.
The European Union has also sent financial aid, but has sometimes met with reluctance from members Hungary and Slovakia.
British Armed Forces Minister Al Carns said Russia’s war on Ukraine was “the most defining conflict” in decades.
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“I don’t think anyone of us would be able to guess (when the war started) the scale and size of what has taken place,” he said.
The cost of rebuilding war-battered Ukraine would amount to almost $588 billion over the next decade, according to World Bank, the European Commission, the United Nations and the Ukrainian government.
That is nearly three times the estimated nominal GDP of Ukraine for last year, they said in a report Monday.
Last year, NBA stars Russell Westbrook and Kemba Walker launched a startup, Eazewell, which aims to make funeral planning simpler and more streamlined, thanks in part to artificial intelligence (AI).
“We’re trying to take the weight off people’s shoulders as much as we can, and make this process so much easier for people,” Walker shared with CNBC.
And it seems the trend is growing.
The Washington Post reported on the “rise” of AI obituary writing tools, stating that funeral directors “are increasingly asking the relatives of the deceased whether they would prefer for AI to write the obituary”.
AI funerals are “uncomfortable [and] potentially dangerous”
According to Purves, “A funeral director’s job requires a blend of administrative and interpersonal skills and, above all, a desire to support people facing loss.
“Funeral directors deliver a unique service: guiding, supporting and actioning a family’s wishes, while also project managing and communicating with third parties such as churches, florists or celebrants.”
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And given that people using their service may be in varying states of emotional distress, Purve added, the “intuition and empathy of a funeral director is what makes – or breaks – the quality of service”.
In that light, he said, “Replacing thiscare with AI-powered services seems not only uncomfortable but also potentially dangerous. When dealing with people at their most vulnerable, entrustingtheiremotionalwellbeingwithartificialintelligenceseems profoundly misplaced”.
Some experts have cautioned against AI therapy chatbots, which Stanford researchers argue carry “risks” like bias and harmful responses to emotionally-charged prompts.
“Beyond the emotional cost, the potential proliferation of AI-driven funeral services also risk lowering professional standards,” Purves continued.
“If funeral homes feel pressuredtocompetewiththeirlow-cost,AI-counterparts,theymaybe compelled to cut corners: fewer staff, less time with families or reduced aftercare.
“Grievingfamiliescouldfind themselvesdealingwithimpersonal‘click-and-plan’interfacesinsteadof skilled professionals who understand cultural and religious nuances, and can anticipate emotional needs before they’re expressed.”
AI may have some place in funeral care, though
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According to Purves, this doesn’t mean AI has no place in funeral care.
“The rise inlivestreamingfuneralservices,forexample,hasbeenoverwhelmingly positive for the industry, as loved ones overseas can pay their respects without having to travel,” he stated.
“Equally, funeral directors often use advanced systems to plan and manage their operations, allowing firms to effectively coordinate arrangements and ensuring clients receive the support they need.”
The funeral director added that admin and paperwork capabilities could be useful, too, “provided it is used to enhance, not replace, the human service”.
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This could leave funeral directors with more time to care for the bereaved in person.
But, Purves ended, “The future of funeral care shouldn’t be about replacing compassion with convenience. It should be about protecting what makes us human in the first place.
“Because no matter how advanced technology becomes, there will always be one thing it can’t do: care.”
Luke Tryl, UK director of More in Common, stressed it was a “high stakes”, possibly “seismic” by-election as it would show whether Reform, with around 30 per cent of the vote, could win lots of seats as it seeks a Commons majority, if the Green surge is “real” or whether Labour’s woes may ease.