Savannah Guthrie’s brother issues new plea to mother’s kidnappers
Savannah Guthrie’s family has issued a fresh plea to their mother’s suspected kidnappers after the deadline listed on an apparent ransom letter connected to the 84-year-old’s disappearance passed.
“Whoever is out there holding our mother. We want to hear from you,” the “Today” show co-host’s brother, Camron Guthrie, said in a second video posted to Instagram Thursday evening.
“We haven’t heard anything directly. We need you to reach out, and we need a way to communicate with you so we can move forward. But first we have to know that you have our mom. We want to talk to you, and we are waiting for contact.”
Police believe Nancy Guthrie was abducted from her Arizona home, where she was last seen Saturday evening. As searches continued for a fifth day with no suspects identified, investigators revealed new details about a ransom letter sent to multiple media outlets earlier this week.
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The ransom note listed an initial deadline of 5 p.m. Thursday and a second deadline next Monday, FBI Phoenix Special Agent in Charge Heith Janke said at an earlier press conference. Nancy’s family members are “still waiting for communication” and have not received “proof of life,” he noted.
Investigators also arrested one person in connection with an “imposter” ransom demand, Janke told reporters.
What we know about Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance
“Today” show star Savannah Guthrie’s mom, Nancy Guthrie, was last seen at her Arizona home Saturday night.
The 84-year-old is “limited in mobility” but of “great sound mind,” according to local authorities. Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said Monday that he believes Nancy was abducted.
Police are investigating a ransom letter sent to news outlets earlier this week. The letter lists a deadline of 5 p.m. Thursday, along with a second deadline next Monday, according to Heith Janke, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Phoenix office.
The family has not received “proof of life,” and there has been “no contact” since the note was sent, Janke said.
President Donald Trump said Wednesday night he spoke with Savannah and is “deploying all resources to get her mother home safely.”
Katie Hawkinson5 February 2026 19:33
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Recap: Timeline of Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance
Earlier Thursday, the Pima County Sheriff’s Office revealed an updated timeline of the events leading up to Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance.
Saturday, 5:32 p.m.: Nancy travels to a local family member’s home for dinner.
Saturday, 9:48 p.m.: Family members drop Nancy off at her home, and her garage door opens.
Saturday, 9:50 p.m.: Nancy’s garage door closes.
Sunday, 1:47 a.m.: Nancy’s doorbell camera disconnects.
Sunday, 2:12 a.m.: Software detects a person on the camera (authorities have said there is no video available).
Sunday, 2:28 a.m.: Nancy’s pacemaker app shows it disconnected from her phone.
Sunday, 11:56 a.m.: The family checks on Nancy after hearing she did not attend church.
Sunday, 12:03 p.m.: 911 call made to Pima County Sheriff’s Department.
Sunday, 12:15 p.m.: Patrol car arrives at Nancy’s home.
Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 03:20
Nancy Guthrie is ‘okay but scared,’ according to alleged ransom letter
Nancy Guthrie is “okay but scared,” according to the alleged ransom note sent to media outlets.
“They began the letter by saying that that Nancy is is okay, but scared,” TMZ founder Harvey Levin, who has seen the letter, told CNN.
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“So they say she is okay, and also that she’s aware of the letter and the demands.”
The Guthrie family has urged the person behind their mother’s disappearance to “reach out” and provide proof that she is still alive.
Levin added that he believed the suspected kidnapper was based “in the Tuscon area,” based on discussions with his colleagues.
“This doesn’t feel like this is somebody out of state or out of the country who hatched this plan. It feels more localized,” he said.
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Police are still working to verify the authenticity of the alleged ransom letter, which was also sent to a local news outlet in Tuscon, in Arizona, as well as TMZ.
Speaking to CNN, TMZ founder Harvey Levin said that the ransom letter had two deadlines – but that one had sounded “more consequential.”
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“There was this deadline at five o’clock today, and… I’m trying to pick my words carefully here, there is a change. There is a change in what the kidnapper may want,” he said.
“The Monday deadline is far more consequential.”
Levin added: “It felt like somebody means business. I mean, when you read it, it’s very detailed. This person thought through, I believe, again, if it’s legit, this person thought through the markers of showing that it’s real.”
Police are investigating the ransom letter, sent to news outlets earlier this week, and are yet to verify its authenticity.
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Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 02:40
TMZ founder says Guthrie family has ‘no way’ of contacting suspected kidnapper
The founder of TMZ, one of two media outlets that received copies of an alleged ransom letter for Nancy Guthrie, says that her family currently has no way to contact a suspected kidnapper.
Harvey Levin spoke to CNN shortly after the release of a second video by the Guthrie family in which they urged the person holding their mother to “reach out.”
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“They are pleading for this person to come forward. If it indeed is the person behind this letter, the letter says you will have no way of contacting me. This is the only contact,” Levin said.
“So that’s why they’re pleading for proof of life. That’s why they are begging because they have no idea how to get in touch with this person.
“They went to great lengths in sending this email to us, in making sure that it stays anonymous.”
Police are investigating the ransom letter, sent to news outlets earlier this week, and are yet to verify its authenticity.
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Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 02:20
Watch: Savannah Guthrie’s brother issues new plea to mother’s kidnappers
Savannah Guthrie’s brother issues new plea to mother’s kidnappers
Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 02:00
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Read the full DOJ statement on imposter arrest
Here is the full DOJ statement on the recent arrest of a man over an “imposter” ransom demand.
On Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026, the FBI arrested Derrick Callella in Hawthorne, Calif. Callella has been charged via a criminal complaint filed in federal court for transmitting a demand for ransom in interstate commerce, and without disclosing his identity, utilizing a telecommunications device with the intent to abuse, threaten, or harass a person.
“The Department of Justice will protect victims and families at all costs, and grief profiteers will be held accountable,” said U.S. Attorney Timothy Courchaine. “This case came together in under 24 hours because of the coordinated work of the FBI, local law enforcement and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Central District of California.”
“To those imposters who are trying to take advantage and profit from this situation – we will investigate and ensure you are held accountable for your actions,” said FBI Phoenix Special Agent in Charge Heith Janke.
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Per policy, the FBI does not release booking photos.
A criminal complaint is simply a method by which a person is charged with criminal activity and raises no inference of guilt. An individual is presumed innocent until evidence is presented to a jury that establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 01:40
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Trump keeping tabs on search for Nancy Guthrie
Donald Trump is keeping tabs on the ongoing search for Nancy Guthrie, White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt has said.
The president watched Thursday’s press conference updates and has personally spoken with her daughter, NBC anchor Savannah Guthrie.
“The president, as you all know, spoke directly with Savannah yesterday and told her that the federal government is here to help. Any requests that are made by state and local officials in the search of Mrs. Guthrie will absolutely be accommodated,” Leavitt said.
“I spoke with the FBI directly about that today as well, and our hearts and our prayers are with Savannah and her entire family as they search for her dear mother.”
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Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 01:20
Sheriff’s department says comms staff ‘overwhelmed’ by well-wishers
The Pima County Sheriff’s Department has asked that well-wishers stop using its non-emergency phone line to send messages to the Guthrie family following the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie.
“The Pima County Sheriff’s Department understands that many people want to share their thoughts and prayers with the family of Nancy Guthrie, and we appreciate the community’s support,” the department wrote on X.
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“We respectfully ask that these messages be shared on social media and not through the PCSD non-emergency phone line. Calls expressing condolences have overwhelmed our communications staff, and it’s critical that the line remain available for law enforcement purposes.
“Thank you for your understanding and cooperation as we continue to serve the community.”
Mike Bedigan6 February 2026 01:00
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What happened to Savannah Guthrie’s mom? The search continues as Today Show host demands proof of life
Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today co-host Savannah Guthrie, has been missing for five days, and while authorities have no proof she’s alive, they are holding out hope that she’s “still out there.”
North Yorkshire Council is currently considering the future of a ban on parking motorhomes overnight on parts of the coast following an “overwhelming” number of objections.
An Experimental Traffic Regulation Order (ETRO) was introduced to restrict overnight parking at Sandsend, Royal Albert Drive, and Cayton Bay after NYC said the number of motorhomes had reached an “unacceptable level”.
However, the council will only be able to use data gathered from two locations – Sandsend and Royal Albert Drive – as signs at Cayton Bay were subjected to vandalism.
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Cayton Bay, with its wide sweeping bay, a year-round dog-friendly beach, clean water, and affordable parking is “a magnet for holidaymakers and is a beautiful place to explore, no matter what time of the year you decide to visit”, North Yorkshire’s tourism website promises.
According to a council report, not all visitors attracted to the ‘magnet for holidaymakers’ were impressed by the ban on overnight parking.
“Members will note that the original ETRO included a third site at Cayton Bay south of Scarborough.
“Unfortunately, due to episodes of vandalism to the signage, we were unable to obtain an appropriate period with the regulation in place to have a meaningful trial of the prohibition here,” a report presented to councillors states.
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The report goes on to state that “as mentioned above, we were unable to commence the ETRO in Cayton Bay due to persistent external factors”.
Ahead of the order expiring in May, the council has been carrying out consultations to find a way forward.
Since its introduction, thousands of residents have reportedly also complained about the “displacement effects” of the order and a decision on its future will be made this spring.
The council’s report stated that “motor caravans are as welcome at seafront parking locations as any other vehicle in the daytime, but extended stays, which usually include overnight parking, restrict the ability of other visitors to find suitable parking when visiting the area for recreation”.
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Fire safety concerns have also been a key consideration, according to the council, which noted that the Fire Authority “has received a number of complaints and attended incidents on the Marine Drive and Royal Albert Drive, and has concerns with regard to fire spread”.
Members of the Scarborough and Whitby Area Committee are set to discuss the issue at a meeting in Whitby on Monday, March 2.
Chippies across York and North Yorkshire were celebrated at the 38th Annual Fish and Chip Awards, a ceremony held last night (February 25) which aims to celebrate fish friers across the nation.
The National Federation of Fish Friers (NFFF), the body which organises the awards, hosts 14 different awards with eateries around North Yorkshire taking the crown in a number of the most prestigious categories.
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In the highly competitive Takeaway of the Year award, The Scrap Box in Dunnington was deemed the best chippy in the country – taking the number one spot from a shortlist of ten exceptional chippies, including two other North Yorkshire chippies: Mister C’s in Selby and The Fish Bank in Sherburn-in-Elmet.
They also received an award for their marketing initiative.
Elsewhere in the county, Trenchers in Whitby was voted Restaurant of the Year – beating out competition from Bristol, Rotherham, and Devon to be crowned the best in the nation.
In York itself, Haxby Fish and Chips were recognised by the judges in two categories with Abigail Baker named as the runner up for Drywite Young Fish Frier of the Year and owner David Miller given an award for Outstanding Contributions to the industry.
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At the time that the shortlists were revealed in November, Andrew Crook, president of the National Federation of Fish Friers which organises the awards, said: “The 38th instalment of the National Fish & Chip Awards is one of the most amazing competitions we’ve had the pleasure of running.
“Fish and chips is a national treasure, and the skill, passion, resilience and desire to serve communities with the best food shown by the takeaways we’ve announced today is a great representation of what makes our industry so special. We can’t wait to reveal the winner in a few months’ time.”
The Clintons have previously accused the panel’s Republican leader, James Comer, of “partisan politics” in his handling of the investigation. They described the legal summonses as “nothing more than a ploy to attempt to embarrass political rivals, as President Trump has directed”.
North Korea’s leader has warned his country could “initiate arbitrary action” and “completely destroy” South Korea if its security was threatened.
Kim Jong-un added that South Korea’s “complete collapse cannot be ruled out”.
The remarks appear to be Mr Kim’s most direct warnings against Seoul and were reported by state media KCNA on Thursday.
Image: North Korean leader Kim Jong Un acknowledges applause during the Ninth Congress. Pic: Reuters
Image: Kim Jong Un and his daughter watch a flypast during a military parade to commemorate the Ninth Congress. Pic: Reuters
Mr Kim revealed plans to expand the country’s nuclear and intercontinental ballistic missiles arsenal, ruling out discussions with South Korea and labelling them as the “most hostile enemy”.
He added that the country would focus on expanding its nuclear arsenal, and prospects for bettering relations with the US rested entirely on Washington’s attitude.
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The comments highlight the increasingly different approaches pursued by Seoul and Pyongyang towards each other.
Image: Kim Jong Un attends a parade with his daughter in Pyongyang.
Pic: KCNA/AP
South Korean President Lee Jae Myung responded to Mr Kim’s comments on Thursday by saying the value his country needs to espouse is peace.
“A long-established sense of hostility and confrontation cannot be eliminated in an instant. We must build trust through continuous efforts,” Mr Lee said.
However, speaking at the country’s week-long Ninth Congress of the ruling Workers’ Party, Mr Kim vowed to develop stronger intercontinental ballistic missiles.
The country also wants to develop attack systems that use artificial intelligence, unmanned drones, and weapons that can hit enemy satellites, KCNA said.
The Congress is reported to have wrapped up with a military parade in the capital on Wednesday.
The presence of Mr Kim’s daughter, known as Ju Ae, will fuel further speculation over whether she is being groomed as his successor.
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Image: Kim Ju Ae, the daughter of North Korean leader Kim Jong Un, attended the parade. Pic: Reuters
North Korea has assembled around 50 warheads and possesses enough fissile material to produce up to 40 more, the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) estimated last year.
Image: Kim Jong Un gives a thumbs-up to troops during a military parade to commemorate the Ninth Congress.
Pic: KCNA/Reuters
The thinktank also believes that Pyongyang is accelerating the production of further fissile material.
The North’s leader has so far not accepted overtures by US President Donald Trump, whom he met with three times during the 79-year-old’s first term, but he has left the door open for discussions with the US.
“If the US withdraws its policy of confrontation with North Korea by respecting our country’s current status… There is no reason why we cannot get along well with the US,” he said, according to KCNA.
Image: Kim Jong Un greets attendees as his daughter Kim Ju Ae looks on.
Pic: KCNA/Reuters
Mr Trump plans to travel to China from 31 March to 2 April.
South Korea’s spy agency has speculated that the two leaders could meet around that time.
Small kitchen appliance brand Sage has topped several of our recent kitchen tests. And no, it hasn’t paid to be there. Categories are often tested by different experts, yet the brand has still been named as the purveyor of our best toastie maker, best sparkling water maker and, of course, our highest rated coffee machine.
Many of the brand’s appliances are well-finished in stainless steel, bringing a quality to your kitchen that can’t be found at lower prices. Still, when food writer and kettle and toaster tester, Imogen Hope named Sage’s £119 Soft Top Luxe Kettle her best kettle, we decided it was worth further investigation.
Here, Imogen sets out exactly why she thinks it’s worth spending this on a kettle, while I, Recommended’s home and garden editor, explain why I would reach for her value buy, instead.
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What you need to know about Sage’s The Soft Top Luxe Kettle
Before we dive into the pros and cons, here’s what £120 of kettle will buy you.
Hope tested the stainless steel iteration (colours from pink to burgundy are also available) and was impressed with the build quality, free of any flimsy plastic. Surprisingly, though, it’s a simple kettle. You will find no variable temperature settings, touchscreen or keep-warm function here. But you won’t need to read a manual to decipher its two buttons either (one for the lid and one to boil), and thoughtful details like a transparent side panel and lid make it easy to see how much water is inside and if it is close to boiling.
The ergonomic handle is comfortable, and there are clear markers from between two and seven cups to show how much water it contains. Its most notable feature is a soft-close lid (hence the name), which slowly and smoothly opens to give plenty of access for filling, and prevents any risk of hot water splashing should you need to open the lid right after boiling.
“But this circle will close with me teaching him a lesson.
“He’s not fighting some weight-drained super middleweight. I am in shape and will bring home this victory.”
Fury is signed to Frank Warren’s Queensberry, but TKO president Mark Shapiro said on Wednesday that Zuffa Boxing will promote the fight, which will be shown on Netflix.
Prograis, 37, is a former world champion at light-welterweight, but has two losses in his past three outings, including to Jack Catterall and Devin Haney.
The fact that Keir Starmer’s government have promised to put women and girls “at the heart of everything we do” in our international work is right and proper, recognising the growing threats of violence and of essential rights undermined everywhere.
However with dramatic cuts to our international development budget already underway there will be competition for what shrunken resources remain. We need to ensure that one of the key building blocks to fulfilling that ambition to empower women and girls – access to clean water and sanitation does not suffer.
WASH services – Water, Sanitation and Hygiene – are incredibly important if we are to reduce the almost 400,000 deaths of young children every year from diseases including cholera and diarrhoea. One in four people globally still lack safe drinking water.
But that is only part of the story. The United Nations has drawn a direct line between a lack of safe water and sanitation and much wider problems including food and supply chain shortages that can spark conflicts.
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The All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on WASH I chair, backed by the wisdom of charity Water Aid, has previously highlighted in a landmark report how previous cuts to UK aid spending on WASH “put our national health security at risk” – because they raised the risks of infectious diseases and antibiotic-resistant “superbugs” spreading across the world.
It’s something that the great British public “gets” too. Significantly, 54 per cent of the British public put clean water and toilets in their top priorities for spending development aid. MPs and government should take heed.
A failure to provide clean water and sanitation makes it impossible to achieve the aim of giving women and girls more control over their lives – because it is they who disproportionately carry the burden of collecting water. That means dragging them away from school and from work and putting them in greater danger from gender-based violence.
In addition, as Evelyn Mere, the country director in Nigeria WaterAid, put it so powerfully when describing the impact of WASH cuts to MPs recently: “The number one thing is that girls are unable to stay in school because they have no decent toilets and no place to manage their menstruation in dignity and privacy. Once menstruation starts, they stay away from school. That negatively impacts their educational performance in school and begins the journey of disadvantaging them in life.”
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For all these reasons, it is alarming that WASH services are likely to be targeted in the aid cuts that will strip £6.5 billion from our aid budget by 2028 – some 40 per cent of the money available.
Ministers have admitted the UK will be “moving away from the direct delivery of WASH services”, arguing developing countries can step in with our help to “strengthen” their capabilities. Closer partnerships are welcome, of course – but not if that is a cover for cuts. Alarm bells are ringing.
This government must not repeat the mistakes of previous Conservative administration who slashed WASH spending by 78 per cent at the turn of this decade – making a mockery our commitment to the UN goal of universal WASH access for all by 2030.
Consider also how, just 15 months ago, the UK and Nigeria signed a pioneering strategic partnership, naming economic growth, jobs and reducing aid dependency among its aims. All of this is undermined by failing to fund WASH services, because people must take sick days and spend money to treat diseases caused by unsafe water and lack of sanitation. That is a drag anchor on the Nigerian economy.
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WaterAid has highlighted evidence that Nigeria could benefit from a $26 billion (£19bn) “sanitation economy” by 2030, where small businesses sell toilets, people find jobs building them, and young women train as plumbers – just as India provided 100 million toilets in less than a decade – if the UK invests in WASH services. It would help to deliver the very economic boost the partnership seeks.
I was proud when Labour’s former interim leader Harriet Harman was appointed as the UK’s special envoy for women and girls, to in her words “play a key role in standing up for the rights of all women and girls at a critical time”.
However, that noble promise cannot be met if the UK shrinks back from playing its part in ensuring the most basic rights of all, to water, sanitation and hygiene.
Rupa Huq is the chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Water, Sanitation and Hygiene and Labour MP for Ealing Central and Acton
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This article has been produced as part of The Independent’s Rethinking Global Aid project
Indonesia has freed and deported an American man after he spent 11 years in jail for the premeditated murder of his then-girlfriend’s mother, in a case known as the Bali “suitcase murder”.
Tommy Schaefer was sentenced to 18 years in prison for the 2014 murder of Sheila von Wiese-Mack, the mother of Heather Mack, during a holiday on the island.
The battered body of the Chicago socialite was found in a suitcase in the boot of a taxi at a luxury resort.
The couple were trying to gain access to a $1.5m (£1.1m) trust fund, prosecutors have said.
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Image: Tommy Schaefer pictured in 2015. Pic: Reuters
Mack, who was a few weeks pregnant at the time of the attack, told the court in 2015 her mother objected to her relationship with Schaefer.
She covered her 62-year-old mother’s mouth while Schaefer used a fruit bowl for the assault.
Police in Bali arrested Mack, nearly 19 at the time, and the then-21-year-old Schaefer a day later.
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Schaefer was deported back to the US from Bali International Airport on Tuesday after serving his sentence and receiving a number of remissions for good behaviour, said Felucia Sengky Ratna, head of the Bali Regional Office of the directorate general of immigration.
Image: Tommy Schaefer. Pic: Reuters
He was in custody and arrived in Illinois on Wednesday, a spokesperson for the US Marshals Service, which transports federal prisoners, confirmed.
Schaefer was scheduled to make an initial court appearance in Chicago on Thursday morning on federal charges of conspiracy to kill someone in a foreign country, conspiracy to commit murder and tampering with a victim.
Image: Pic: Anta Kesuma/EPA/Shutterstock
Mack served seven years of a 10-year prison sentence in Bali for helping with the murder and was deported in October 2021.
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She was also sentenced to 26 years in prison in Chicago in January 2024, after she pleaded guilty to helping kill her mother and stuffing the body in a suitcase.
A radical new structure for English rugby is expected to be rubber-stamped at a Rugby Football Union council meeting on Friday.
The Prem would separate from the rest of the pyramid, with traditional promotion and relegation immediately scrapped.
Instead the Prem will look to expand from 10 teams to 12 teams by 2030, with further expansion possible if ambitious clubs meet criteria on and off the field.
This could mean clubs like Wasps, Worcester and London Irish – who all went bust in the 2022-23 season – return to the top flight in the future.
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As it stands, there is a mechanism for promotion and relegation to and from the Prem via a play-off with the top-placed side in the Champ.
However Ealing Trailfinders, consistently the best team in the second tier, have failed to meet the existing standards – especially around stadium size.
There has been no relegation from the Prem since Saracens went down in 2020 after a heavy points deduction for salary cap breaches. Sarries were also the last team to gain promotion after winning the Championship in 2021.
Under the new plans, ambitious clubs would still be able to apply for a place in the Prem, but would need to meet a variety of revamped criteria – potentially financial and commercial as well as on-pitch performance and potential.
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English rugby insiders expect the new structure to collectively raise standards across the clubs and make the game more attractive to investors.
“We are lifting the bar on what we want clubs to do across various areas,” said one leading executive.
According to sources, any club would be able to apply for a place in an expanded Prem.
They could be ambitious Champ sides such as Coventry, dormant former powerhouses like Wasps – who plan to relaunch in Kent in the coming seasons – or brand-new entities.
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The Champ clubs had previously rejected plans for a franchise-type model, but leading figures in the club game insist their board has been consulted throughout the process and have endorsed the recommendation.
“It could be transformational for aspirational Champ clubs,” a senior source told the BBC.
“We are looking at a range of different options to make the Premiership thriving, exciting and a really interesting place to invest in,” RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney told BBC Sport last year.
“Part of that will be a model whereby you qualify for an expansion league in the Premiership, but based on criteria around financial sustainability, fanbase and stadium, not just performance on the field of play.”
Soham murderer Ian Huntley is reported to be fighting for his life after an attack at high-security HMP Frankland. According to reports from The Sun, he was left lying in a puddle of blood on his prison wing and was taken to hospital this morning (February 26).
The former caretaker, 52, is serving a life sentence at the County Durham prison for murdering Jessica Chapman and Holly Wells in Soham in 2002. A spokesperson from the Ministry of Justice said: “A prisoner is receiving treatment after an incident at HMP Frankland on Thursday morning. It would be inappropriate to comment further while police investigate.”
A North East Ambulance Service spokesperson added: “We received a call at 9.23am on Thursday 26 February 2026 to reports of an incident at HM Prison Frankland in County Durham. We dispatched two ambulance crews to the scene and requested support from the Great North Air Ambulance Service (GNAAS). One patient was transported to hospital by road.”
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Jessica and Holly, both aged 10, went missing when they left a family barbecue to go and buy sweets. They never returned home and their bodies were found a week later.
Huntley had lured the girls to his home, murdered them and disposed of their bodies in a ditch. After efforts from police and the local community, their bodies were found near an airbase, 12 miles from Soham.
He returned to the site where he dumped the bodies and cut off their closed and burned them, his trial heard. The remains of Manchester United shirts that the girls were wearing were found later in a bin by police.
Suspicions were raised when he gave a chillingly detailed interview to the press about the girls, who attended St Andrew’s Primary School. It appeared that he took an unusual interest in the case.
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Huntley denied the murders but was ultimately convicted in 2003 following a trial. Huntley has previously been attacked in the same prison, when a prisoner slit his throat in 2010.
A spokesman for Durham Constabulary said: “Police were alerted to an assault which had taken place within HMP Frankland in Durham this morning.
“A male prisoner suffered serious injuries during the incident and was transported to hospital. A police investigation is now underway into the circumstances of the incident and detectives are liaising with staff at the prison.”