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Sheriff Calls Latest Nancy Guthrie Ransom Letter Fake as Savannah Guthrie Pleads for Help Finding Her Mother

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Nancy Guthrie

TUCSON, Ariz. — Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos dismissed the most recent alleged ransom communication in the Nancy Guthrie case as fraudulent, even as new details continue to surface in the nearly five-month search for the missing 84-year-old mother of “Today” co-anchor Savannah Guthrie.

After TMZ reported receiving an email from someone claiming to know the identities of those responsible for Guthrie’s disappearance, Nanos addressed the letter’s credibility during a June 26 appearance on Tucson radio station 1030 KVOI AM’s “The Buckmaster Show.”

“I think the FBI has done a number of arrests for false or fake ransom notes,” Nanos told host Bill Buckmaster.

Nanos said he believed investigators were likely looking at another fraudulent submission, though he noted the FBI would continue its own review of the claim. The sheriff, whose department has worked alongside the FBI since Guthrie was reported missing in February, expressed frustration at how public attention surrounding the case has occasionally been exploited by people sending false information.

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“It is a shame that these types of events occur,” Nanos said. “People have great interest and that’s good because it helps us but then it gets really abused.”

The Pima County Sheriff’s Department declined to comment further on the latest letter, citing the active nature of the investigation, and the FBI similarly declined to comment. The newest email arrives just days after NBC News reported that a second, separate note sent earlier to media outlets indicated Guthrie had died. According to three people familiar with the matter who spoke to NBC News, that second letter, unlike an earlier one that requested cryptocurrency in exchange for her safe return, contained no apology and made no financial demand. Both of those earlier letters were sent to Jessica Bobula, news director for NBC News’ Arizona affiliate KOLD, and were reviewed by investigators, who considered them potentially credible.

Savannah Guthrie addressed the unfolding situation during the June 23 broadcast of “Today,” choosing her words carefully given her position as both a journalist and a family member directly affected by the case.

“I don’t have any comment on this story and I’m not involved in our coverage—but I can’t pretend I’m not here,” Guthrie said. She went on to describe the toll the disappearance has taken on her family. “This is the life that my sister lives, I live, that my brother lives, that our extended family lives, that our children live every day and we are in agony,” she said.

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The case began the night of Jan. 31, when Nancy Guthrie was last seen by family at her Tucson home around 9:30 p.m. She was reported missing the next day after failing to attend a scheduled church service, prompting her children to search the property before calling authorities around noon. Sheriff Nanos arrived personally at the scene, an unusual step he later explained was driven by what investigators found at the house.

“You don’t typically get the sheriff out at a scene like this, but it’s very concerning what we’re learning from the house,” Nanos told reporters at a Feb. 2 press conference.

Authorities soon confirmed they believed a crime had occurred inside the home, citing Guthrie’s limited mobility as evidence she did not leave voluntarily. Officials have also stressed that despite her physical limitations, Guthrie remains mentally sharp, ruling out any concern that she may have simply wandered off due to confusion or memory loss. Investigators have repeatedly emphasized the urgency of locating her given her dependence on daily medication, warning that going without it for even 24 hours could prove fatal.

A timeline released by Nanos in early February detailed a sequence of disconnections and irregularities the night Guthrie disappeared: her doorbell camera went offline at 1:47 a.m., her pacemaker app showed a disconnection from her phone at 2:28 a.m., and family members did not discover she was missing until nearly 12 hours later, prompting a 911 call shortly after noon. Investigators later released surveillance images recovered from corrupted camera data showing a masked, armed individual approaching Guthrie’s home and appearing to strike the doorbell camera with a fist. The FBI’s Phoenix office subsequently described the suspect as a man standing roughly 5-foot-9 to 5-foot-10 with an average build, wearing a black 25-liter backpack, and increased its reward for information leading to Guthrie’s location or the arrest of those responsible from $50,000 to $100,000.

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Investigators have since cleared all of Guthrie’s children and their spouses as possible suspects, describing the family as fully cooperative throughout the case. Several pieces of evidence that initially drew public speculation, including a pair of gloves found roughly two miles from the home and a human bone discovered about seven miles away in May, were ultimately ruled unrelated to the investigation, with the gloves traced to a nearby restaurant worker and the bone determined to be part of an unrelated prehistoric anthropological find.

Throughout the ordeal, Guthrie’s “Today” colleagues have publicly rallied around her, with co-anchors including Jenna Bush Hager, Sheinelle Jones, Hoda Kotb and Willie Geist offering messages of support and urging viewers to come forward with any information. Savannah, Camron and Annie Guthrie have also released several emotional video appeals directly addressed to their mother’s possible captors, pleading for proof of life and a path toward her safe return.

As the case nears the five-month mark without a confirmed suspect or resolution, authorities continue to caution the public against drawing conclusions from any of the various unverified letters and claims that have surfaced. For Savannah Guthrie, the message has remained consistent even as the investigation grinds on without answers.

“We’re begging for your help,” she said during her June 23 appeal. “We love our mom and we’ll never stop looking for her, ever.”

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Exeter Chiefs acquired by AFC Bournemouth owner Bill Foley

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Business Live

The deal ends 155 years of member ownership

Exeter Chiefs' Dafydd Jenkins celebrates scoring his sides third try during the Gallagher PREM final match between Northampton Saints and Exeter Chiefs at Allianz Stadium on June 20

Exeter Chiefs’ Dafydd Jenkins celebrates scoring his sides third try during the Gallagher PREM final match between Northampton Saints and Exeter Chiefs at Allianz Stadium on June 20(Image: CameraSport via Getty Images)

US business tycoon Bill Foley has completed the acquisition of Premiership Rugby club Exeter Chiefs, ending 155 years of member ownership. Foley’s Cannae Holdings has agreed to invest £19.6m in the Devon side through its newly created subsidiary Black Knight Rugby.

The deal values Exeter at £32.6m, with the new owner set to pay £11.7m to clear outstanding debt and other liabilities, while another £7.9m will remain on the balance sheet for growth capital and general corporate purposes.

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Members voted in favour of the sale to Foley – a billionaire who also owns AFC Bournemouth – in May.

Cannae said on Tuesday (June 30) the transaction was part of a strategy of “transforming its portfolio” to concentrate on sports and entertainment-related assets, where it has the ability to drive shareholder returns.

It is understood the company will look to capitalise on commercial opportunities at Sandy Park – the club’s 15,000-capacity purpose-built rugby stadium – following the takeover.

“Exeter is the type of asset we have been seeking as we transform Cannae into a focused portfolio of sports and entertainment businesses,” said Foley, who is vice chair of Cannae Holdings.

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“We have a proven track record of building successful sports and entertainment brands, like Black Knight Football’s network of clubs, and we intend to bring that same approach to Exeter. We are excited to partner with Tony, the management team and the Exeter community to build on the success of the Club and drive future results.”

Tony Rowe, chair and chief executive of Exeter Chiefs, said the completion of the deal was “a tremendously exciting moment” for the club. He will continue to serve as a director and CEO following the acquisition.

“By partnering with Cannae, we are securing a unique partner with experience, ambition and long-term commitment that will position the club to compete at the highest levels of English and European rugby,” he said.

“I look forward to working with the Cannae team to drive the Club forward with our players, our staff, and our supporters.”

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Hollywood star Michael B Jordan, who won this year’s best actor Oscar for his role in Sinners, is a minority shareholder in Black Knight Football Club.

The news comes just days after Exeter finished as runners-up to Northampton in the 2025/26 season.

“The acquisition of Exeter is the next example of Cannae executing on the strategic priorities outlined by our board,” added Ryan Caswell, chief executive of Cannae Holdings.

“Exeter adds another attractive sports asset to our portfolio at a compelling entry price with upside at both the club and the league level – that can be enhanced through Cannae’s experience operating sports assets.

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“We look forward to working with the Exeter team, its sponsors and the supporters to further the club’s momentum both on and off the pitch.”

Last year, Business Live revealed that all of England’s Premiership rugby clubs were making huge financial losses, with experts warning at the time that the sport was facing a “crisis” that could see more teams going under.

Rugby – the last of the big sports to professionalise – has long relied on owners and benefactors to cover ever-mounting debt burdens.

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Beta Bionics: Some Stabilization In Sight

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Midsection of nurse taking male patient

Beta Bionics: Some Stabilization In Sight

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JLL investment arm betting big on industrial real estate

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JLL investment arm betting big on industrial real estate

Key Points

  • Industrial recently replaced residential as JLL Income Property Trust’s largest allocation, at 38% of the portfolio.
  • Industrial leasing strengthened to start the year, rising 17.8% during the first quarter of 2026 from the same period in 2025, according to JLL.
  • Allan Swaringen, CEO of JLL IPT, calls himself “bullish” on industrial, as new opportunities continue to present themselves and returns are now better than in multifamily.

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Is Kuwait International Airport Open Today? Here’s the Latest Status After Months of War-Related Disruptions

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Kuwait International Airport

KUWAIT CITY — Kuwait International Airport is open and operating today, with both of the country’s national carriers running scheduled flights, though one of its main terminals remains closed for repairs following repeated drone and missile strikes tied to the broader U.S.-Iran conflict that has disrupted Gulf aviation for much of this year.

Kuwait Airways is currently flying out of Terminal 4, while Jazeera Airways operates from Terminal 5, with both airlines maintaining largely normal schedules as the country’s aviation sector continues a gradual recovery. Terminal 1, the airport’s primary international facility, remains closed pending repairs after sustaining significant structural damage, and authorities have not announced a confirmed reopening date.

The airport’s path back to normal operations has been anything but smooth. Since the conflict began Feb. 28 with U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran, Kuwait’s airspace and its main airport have been repeatedly disrupted by Iranian drone attacks, part of a wider pattern of strikes targeting Gulf states hosting American military installations. The airport was first forced to suspend all flights starting Feb. 28, with local carrier Jazeera Airways temporarily diverting operations to Qaisumah International Airport in Saudi Arabia, roughly two and a half hours away by road, during the closure.

Kuwait Airways and Jazeera Airways resumed limited service on April 26, operating out of Terminals 4 and 5 while Terminal 1 remained shuttered. Terminal 1 finally reopened to international traffic on June 1, allowing some foreign carriers to resume service there for the first time in months. That reopening proved short-lived. Just two days later, on June 3, Iranian drones struck the terminal directly, according to Kuwait’s state news agency KUNA, causing severe damage, killing one person and injuring 63 others, including airport workers and passengers.

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Kuwait’s Defense Ministry said its forces detected roughly 30 ballistic missiles and drones launched by Iran that day, with several intercepted over residential areas. A ministry spokesman described the attack as targeting civilian and vital facilities, and Kuwait’s foreign ministry summoned Iran’s charge d’affaires to lodge a formal protest, demanding that two Iranian embassy staff leave the country within 24 hours. Iran’s paramilitary Revolutionary Guard denied responsibility for the strike, with a spokesman claiming the damage was instead caused by a failed U.S. interceptor missile. U.S. Central Command rejected that account, calling it a deliberate Iranian drone attack on the airport.

Despite the severity of the June 3 strike, Kuwait Airways resumed flights from Terminal 4 within hours, reflecting the country’s determination to keep at least limited air traffic moving even amid continued security threats. In the weeks since, Kuwait’s General Authority of Civil Aviation has worked to bring additional capacity back online in phases. Oman Air confirmed it would restart its Kuwait flights on June 25, temporarily routing through Terminal 4 rather than its usual Terminal 1, becoming one of several foreign carriers progressively resuming service as conditions stabilize.

Sheikh Hamoud Mubarak Al Sabah, chairman of Kuwait’s General Civil Aviation Authority, said the decision to reopen the country’s airspace was coordinated closely with relevant domestic and international authorities to ensure operations resumed in line with the highest safety and security standards. He also credited the cooperation of aviation staff and government entities in accelerating the recovery, and specifically thanked Saudi Arabia for helping facilitate Kuwaiti carriers through its airports during the disruption, along with broader coordination among Gulf Cooperation Council members aimed at maintaining regional air traffic continuity throughout the crisis.

The broader security picture in the Gulf has shown signs of easing in recent days, even as sporadic violence has continued to test a fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran. Tensions flared again late last week when Iran was accused of launching attack drones at commercial shipping passing through the Strait of Hormuz and firing missiles and drones at military installations in Kuwait and Bahrain, prompting renewed U.S. retaliatory strikes. By the weekend, however, U.S. officials indicated both sides had agreed to stand down from further direct attacks, with fresh negotiations between Washington and Tehran expected to resume in Doha this week, focused in part on restoring normal commercial shipping and air traffic through the broader Gulf region.

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Aviation risk trackers continue to reflect the uneven nature of that recovery. According to monitoring group OPSGROUP, Kuwait’s airspace has reopened and resumed limited operations after nearly two months of closure earlier this year, though the group cautions that neither Kuwait nor neighboring Iran has yet restored anything resembling normal central Middle East routing. The European Union Aviation Safety Agency has similarly softened its guidance for Kuwait and several other Gulf states from active-avoidance warnings to a recommendation that operators “exercise caution” and maintain updated risk assessments, a marked shift from the stricter warnings issued at the height of the conflict earlier this year, even as the agency continues to advise airlines against operating in Iranian, Iraqi or Lebanese airspace altogether.

For travelers with existing bookings, airline and travel industry sources continue to recommend confirming flight status directly with carriers before heading to the airport, given the airport’s recent history of abrupt, security-driven schedule changes. Kuwait International Airport, located roughly 15.5 kilometers south of Kuwait City’s center, typically handles more than 15 million passengers annually and serves as the primary hub for both Kuwait Airways and Jazeera Airways, connecting the country to more than 100 destinations worldwide.

For now, the practical answer to whether the airport is open today is yes, with flights departing and arriving on a steadily normalizing schedule, but the broader question of whether that recovery can hold remains tied directly to the durability of the ceasefire between the United States and Iran, a truce that has already been tested, and broken, multiple times since it was first announced earlier this year.

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ROHA’s Micronized Colors: Where Performance Meets Clean Label

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Micronized Colors: Where Performance Meets Clean Label

Discover how ROHA’s micronized natural colors elevate clean-label, high-performance food innovation.

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Skylark Meats to shutter Nebraska plant

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Skylark Meats to shutter Nebraska plant

The 215,000-square-foot facility employs 218. 

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This Space Stock Could Be a Takeover Target After Rocket Lab, Iridium Deal

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This Space Stock Could Be a Takeover Target After Rocket Lab, Iridium Deal

This Space Stock Could Be a Takeover Target After Rocket Lab, Iridium Deal

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Consumers seek out private brands

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Consumers seek out private brands

Study shows over two-thirds buy private label items on nearly every shopping trip.

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Comcast: New Direction Deserves A New Rating, I'm A Buy For The First Time In 10 Years

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Comcast: New Direction Deserves A New Rating, I'm A Buy For The First Time In 10 Years

Comcast: New Direction Deserves A New Rating, I'm A Buy For The First Time In 10 Years

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German inflation falls to 2.4% in June

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German inflation falls to 2.4% in June


German inflation falls to 2.4% in June

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