Was Nancy Guthrie’s Kidnapping Actually a Robbery Aimed at the House Next Door?
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Two theories. Both say Nancy Guthrie wasn’t the intended target. CertiK — a two-billion-dollar blockchain security firm — classified the abduction as a wrench attack by proxy, a crypto crime where the person taken is leverage against someone else. A six-million-dollar Bitcoin demand. No known cryptocurrency connection to the Guthrie family.
Then the gem vault. Nancy’s neighbor has maintained a collection of rare gemstones for over forty years. His biggest annual event was happening across Tucson the week Nancy vanished. Google Maps pins both houses at the same address. If a crew working off coordinates arrived at the wrong door, the forty-five-minute window inside Nancy’s home takes on a different meaning entirely.
Robin Dreeke puts both theories through their hardest questions: which one is consistent with the behavioral evidence on the doorbell camera, what the improvised response to the camera tells us about planning versus execution, and whether both theories could point to the same criminal infrastructure operating with bad intelligence.
A look back at the most compelling stories of the week.
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This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.
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