Guthrie Family: Grieving a Missing Mother While the Internet Played Detective
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 β’ 612 Ratings
ποΈ 19 February 2026
β±οΈ 16 minutes
ποΈ Recording | iTunes | RSS
π§ΎοΈ Download transcript
Summary
The Guthrie family spent seventeen days in a psychological vise β grieving a mother whose fate they don't know, while the internet decided they were suspects. Annie Guthrie was the last person to see Nancy alive. That made her a target. Her husband Tommaso was with her. That made him a target. Savannah posted emotional video appeals. Commenters debated whether her tears were real. It took until yesterday for Sheriff Chris Nanos to state publicly that every family member has been cleared β and to call the online accusations what they are: cruel.
On True Crime Today, psychotherapist Shavaun Scott breaks down the psychological dimensions of the Guthrie family's ordeal that go far beyond the missing person case itself. Scott β a licensed clinician with thirty years of experience in trauma recovery and forensic mental health β explains the concept of ambiguous loss, the sustained psychological torment of not knowing whether a loved one is alive or dead, and why research shows it can be more psychologically damaging than confirmed death.
She examines the specific trauma of public suspicion β what it does to a person's sense of self to be accused by thousands of strangers based on nothing but proximity to a timeline. She addresses the compounding effect of institutional helplessness: watching evidence get contaminated, footage take ten days to retrieve, DNA get sent to the wrong state for processing β all while the clock runs on your mother's survival β and having absolutely no power to make any of it go faster or better.
Scott also takes on the question most people don't want to hear: clearing someone's name doesn't clear the psychological record. The accusations live on in screenshots, archived threads, and the memories of people who never saw the follow-up. The family may carry the psychological weight of false suspicion long after the investigation closes β alongside whatever outcome the case itself delivers.
#NancyGuthrie #SavannahGuthrie #FamilyCleared #OnlineAccusations #AmbiguousLoss #GriefAndSuspicion #ShavaunScott #TrueCrimeToday #HiddenKillers #FamilyTrauma
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Bruske, Stacey Cole, and Todd Michaels. |
| 0:08.5 | Shabon Scott is with us as we're breaking down more in the case of Nancy Guthrie. |
| 0:15.9 | Before Sheriff Nannos publicly cleared them just the other day, calling every member of the Guthrie family |
| 0:22.5 | victims, plain and simple. Savannah, her sister Annie, and her brother Cameron and Annie's husband, |
| 0:29.0 | Thomas O, have been living in a psychological pressure cooker that most people can't imagine. |
| 0:34.7 | Their mother was taken. They didn't know if she was alive. |
| 0:39.3 | And while they've been dealing with that, |
| 0:43.5 | strangers on the internet have been dissecting their Instagram videos, |
| 0:46.7 | analyzing their body language, accusing them of involvement, |
| 0:49.8 | and treating their grief as evidence. |
| 0:53.3 | Annie and Thomas O dropped Nancy off at 9.50 p.m. |
| 1:04.2 | The night she disappeared, that proximity to the timeline made them targets. The FBI visited their home and until yesterday, no one in law enforcement had publicly said they didn't do this. |
| 1:13.9 | Shavon Scott, like I said, with us to help us break this down. Ambiguous loss, that's the term, describes experience of losing someone without knowing what happened to them. Nancy Guthrie's family has been living in that space now |
| 1:19.2 | for 18 days. They can't grieve because they don't know if she's dead. They can't fully hope |
| 1:24.9 | because what evidence is there that gives hope? What does ambiguous loss |
| 1:30.5 | actually do to the human mind over the course of these weeks? And what is this family experiencing |
| 1:39.4 | on the inside right now? It's got to be absolute hell for them. |
| 1:45.4 | You know, it's requiring that they hold two realities at once. |
| 1:49.1 | One possibility that they're hoping for is that she's going to come home. |
| 1:53.5 | And then, of course, the other possibility I'm sure they're thinking of she's not there |
| 1:59.0 | anymore and they, you know, they're not going to have her back ever and the thought |
| 2:03.7 | that they may never know what happened and so how do you grieve you know we often talk about is it |
... |
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