It has now been more than two weeks since 84 year old Nancy Guthrie was reported missing on February 1, 2026. The search is still active. The FBI and local police are working together. They have shared images and a short video of a man seen on surveillance cameras outside her home. No arrests have been made. No suspect has been officially named. But while detectives continue their work, another scene has been growing outside Nancy Guthrie’s house. Several YouTube streamers have set up cameras on the street. Some have been live streaming for hours at a time. Police are now openly frustrated. They say these streamers are turning every small update into “breaking news,” even when there is nothing new to report. The attention has grown so much that neighbors say the street no longer feels calm. And officers are spending time managing crowds instead of focusing only on the investigation.
YouTuber Jimmy Williams, Ashleigh Banfield, Jonathan Lee Riches and Sheriff Chris Nanos speak as online speculation grows in Nancy Guthrie case
According to Inside Edition, some streamers have even been camping outside Nancy Guthrie’s home. One of them is YouTuber Jimmy Williams, who runs a channel called “Dolly Vision.” As reported by 7 News Australia, Williams once worked in construction and now live streams crime scenes and missing person cases.Williams told reporters that his viewers want to see everything in real time. When asked how long he stays outside the house, he said, “I do it in shifts… I’ll sit here for about five or six hours. I’ll go back to the hotel, cool off, get something to eat, and then come back out and do another four or five hours.”Inside Edition also reported that Williams argued with a neighbor about where he parked his vehicle.At the same time, online talk has taken a darker turn. Podcaster Ashleigh Banfield suggested that someone in Nancy Guthrie’s family could be responsible. True crime reporter Jonathan Lee Riches made a similar claim. Those comments quickly spread across social media.That led Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos to step in. On February 16, he released a public statement defending the family. He said, “The family has been nothing but cooperative and gracious and are victims in this case. To suggest otherwise is not only wrong, it is cruel.”Later, speaking to NBC News, Chris Nanos explained why he felt it was important to speak out. He said he did it “because sometimes we forget we’re human and we hurt, and kindness matters. It is every cop’s duty to stand up and be that voice for our victims.”Meanwhile, the tips keep coming in. The Los Angeles Times reported that federal investigators have received more than 18,000 tips. The Pima County Sheriff’s Department has received more than 50,000 calls. Retired police captain Paul Vernon said, “All the speculation doesn’t help. The detectives and police public relations people have to spend so much time to correct it.”The investigation is ongoing. Authorities continue to ask the public for verified information, not guesses. For now, Nancy Guthrie is still missing, and police say their focus remains on finding her.

