The car was supposedly at a local Circle K with the convenience store in Tucson turning over surveillance video to investigators on Friday, according to a report from NBC News. NBC Los Angeles
Law enforcement officials in Arizona searching for Nancy Guthrie have obtained surveillance footage from a Circle K store that may show a “vehicle of interest” in the puzzling case, according to reports.
The vehicle was reportedly seen at or near the convenience store in Tucson, NBC News reported.
Authorities visited the Circle K location on Oracle Road on Friday after “receiving a tip regarding a vehicle of interest,” a company spokesperson told the outlet. “Our team has provided them access to the store’s surveillance video,” the spokesperson said.
A Circle K employee also confirmed that investigators were at the gas station Friday. The store is about half a mile from the home of Guthrie’s daughter, Anne, and her husband, Tommaso Cioni.
Cioni was the last known person to see Guthrie, dropping her off at her home after dinner on Saturday, Jan. 31 at 9:48 p.m. Hours later, at 2:28 a.m., her pacemaker app reportedly disconnected from her phone. The Circle K store is approximately seven miles — about a 15-minute drive — from Guthrie’s home in the Catalina Foothills.
Officials have not said whether the vehicle is directly connected to the case.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Office said Saturday that there are still no suspects or persons of interest. Investigators also said they will not release additional details about evidence collected while it is being analyzed.
Law enforcement officials in Arizona are searching for a vehicle that could be connected to the kidnapping of Nancy Guthrie, according to a report. Facebook/Savanah Guthrie
“It is standard practice to seek any video available from nearby residences or businesses as part of the ongoing investigation,” the statement said.
The department added that no further press conferences will be held unless there is a significant development.
Neighbors reported seeing a suspicious white van parked on the street in the days before Guthrie disappeared.
“It was somewhere on that street. It was a white van, full-sized, with no printing on the sides. It was parked on the street,” neighbor Brett McIntire told The Post, though he could not recall the exact day he saw it.
On Friday, authorities towed an SUV believed to belong to Guthrie. More than ten police vehicles gathered at her home in the late afternoon. Investigators removed a vehicle from near the property and also collected a wired device from the roof of the house after receiving a tip from a neighbor, according to Fox News.