Nancy Guthrie and JonBenét Ramsey: How Boulder PD Lost the Case Forever (Part 1)
True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews
Tony Brueski
4.2 • 612 Ratings
🗓️ 14 April 2026
⏱️ 24 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
The Nancy Guthrie investigation raised a question that haunts every major case in this country: were the right people in the room when it mattered most? In Tucson, a homicide sergeant with reportedly no homicide experience was dispatched to handle Nancy's disappearance. Veteran detectives were sidelined. A search plane pilot was reassigned. The people with the qualifications the moment demanded were available — and they weren't used.
That pattern didn't start in Tucson. It played out three decades earlier in Boulder, Colorado — and it destroyed the JonBenét Ramsey case.
On December 26th, 1996, a six-year-old beauty queen was dead in her family's basement. Upstairs, a victims' advocate was wiping down the kitchen counters of an active crime scene with spray cleaner. Friends wandered freely through the house. A patrol officer walked past a latched basement door and never opened it. A single detective was left alone with the family. And when the father was told to search the house himself, he found his daughter's body and carried her upstairs — unknowingly destroying the most critical forensic evidence in the case.
Boulder PD had virtually no homicide experience. Denver offered experienced homicide detectives immediately. Boulder refused. The FBI offered help. Boulder refused. The Colorado Bureau of Investigation was available. Boulder refused. Every qualified hand was turned away — the same pattern Nancy Guthrie's family has watched play out in a different form in Pima County, where the questions center on whether Sheriff Nanos built his department around loyalty rather than competence.
This is Part 1 of Beyond Nancy: Exposing Incompetent Investigations — a five-part series that uses the Nancy Guthrie case as the lens to examine what happens when unqualified hands touch the evidence first. Nearly three decades later, JonBenét's killer has never been identified. The crime scene was made unsolvable in the first six hours — by the wrong people, making the wrong calls, refusing every offer of help.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | This is Hidden Killers with Tony Brewski. |
| 0:03.3 | Here now, Tony Brucey. |
| 0:06.6 | When Nancy Guthrie disappeared from her Tucson home, |
| 0:09.3 | the first people through the door were supposed to be the best |
| 0:12.6 | that Pima County Sheriff's Office had. |
| 0:14.8 | Instead, according to reporting, |
| 0:18.1 | that has emerged since what showed up was a homicide sergeant with no homicide experience. |
| 0:24.0 | In understaffed detective squad and veteran investigators who could have helped were left on the |
| 0:30.9 | sideline, allegedly. The most critical hours of the investigation, which as as we all know, are the hours right after the |
| 0:41.2 | crime was committed. The first 48 TV shows about it. The hours that determine whether a case |
| 0:48.8 | gets solved or goes cold were handled by people who weren't ready for what was in front of them. |
| 0:55.7 | That's what this series is all about this week. |
| 0:59.9 | Five cases where the wrong people were in the room at the worst possible moment. |
| 1:05.0 | Five families who paid the price. |
| 1:07.4 | Nancy's story threads through every one of them because the failure that may be shaping |
| 1:14.1 | her case has been destroying cases for decades. |
| 1:18.5 | This, my friends, is part one. |
| 1:24.7 | And as we go through these cases, as we discuss all of these failures in these well-known scenarios, I'd love to get your thoughts and feedback in the comments section on Substack and YouTube. |
| 1:42.7 | Start here. |
| 1:45.0 | Someone wiped down the kitchen counters. |
| 1:50.0 | That's the detail. |
| 1:51.3 | That should keep every investigator in America up at night about this other case. |
... |
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