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True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Nancy Guthrie: Can a Prosecution Survive This Sheriff?

True Crime Today | Daily True Crime News & Interviews

Tony Brueski

True Crime, News, News Commentary

4.2612 Ratings

🗓️ 14 April 2026

⏱️ 18 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Every documented investigative failure in the Nancy Guthrie disappearance carries legal consequences that extend well beyond the search itself. The premature crime scene release, the doorbell footage declared unrecoverable by the sheriff's department and later recovered by the FBI, the evidence routing disputes between agencies, the lead sergeant who had reportedly never worked a homicide — all of it becomes discoverable material the moment someone is charged.

Sheriff Chris Nanos publicly shared specific forensic details, contradicted his own statements within days, and told reporters his guesswork was as good as theirs — language that any defense attorney would introduce to challenge the credibility of the investigation from the stand. His department now faces a unanimous no-confidence vote from its deputies' union, a Board of Supervisors exercising a territorial-era statute to compel sworn testimony, and a federal lawsuit alleging political retaliation during an election he won by fewer than 500 votes.

Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer breaks down the evidentiary chain-of-custody implications, the competency questions raised by the initial response, and the structural problems that predate Nancy's disappearance — including the reassignment of the search plane pilot over a personal dispute and the sidelining of experienced homicide investigators.

The legal question isn't abstract. If a suspect is identified and charged, the defense will have access to every documented failure, every contradictory public statement, and every piece of evidence that was mishandled or declared lost before the FBI stepped in. Coffindaffer assesses whether a prosecution can carry that weight — or whether the damage was done before anyone had a chance to build a case.

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#NancyGuthrie #PimaCountySheriff #ChrisNanos #Tucson #FBI #CriminalJustice #TrueCrime #HiddenKillers #MissingPerson #JusticeForNancy

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is Hidden Killers Live with Tony Brewski and Robin Drey.

0:08.5

Well, here we go.

0:10.1

We're going to talk about Nancy Guthrie.

0:12.2

Again, get an update, discuss where things are at or where they're not at.

0:16.4

Crime scene was released too early.

0:17.8

The thermal imaging plane sat down.

0:19.7

The lead sergeant had never worked a homicide. Experienced detectives had already been sidel early. The thermal imaging plane sat aground. The lead sergeant had never

0:21.2

worked a homicide, experienced detectives had already been sidelined. The doorbell footage was declared

0:26.0

unrecoverable until the FBI recovered it. And the sheriff leading all of this has a documented

0:31.4

grudge against the very agency that was supposed to help him. Every one of those failures,

0:37.2

they have a name attached to him, to it.

0:41.9

The question isn't just what went wrong, it's why,

0:45.6

and whether this case can survive what has been done to it.

0:50.4

Now that we are, I don't know, seven, eight.

0:52.6

How many weeks in are we now, guys?

0:54.4

I don't even, do we know?

0:55.9

And beyond.

0:56.9

I think eight?

0:58.4

Eight, no, I don't know. I think we're on day 70 something. It's, I think it's at least eight or nine weeks, right? My God. I mean, it's the beginning of the year. And here we are. We're almost into May.

1:08.5

It's, yeah.

1:10.0

Jennifer Coffin-Daffer, retired FBI special agent, is our guest.

1:13.3

And, of course, as FBI special agent, is our guest.

...

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