A former Arizona SWAT commander has poured cold water on a âhighly improbableâ theory that Nancy Guthrie was abducted via rugged terrain at the back of her home, insisting whoever was responsible for her disappearance âclearly had to go out the front.â
Authorities have repeatedly scoured the remote terrain behind Savannah Guthrieâs 84-year-old momâs Tucson home since Nancy was first reported missing on Feb. 1 â fueling initial speculation that her kidnapper could have used a remote track to flee undetected.
But Bob Krieger, a former lieutenant who spent nearly 30 years with the Pima County Sheriffâs Office, took News Nationâs Brian Entin on a tour of the area to show just why the theory is so unlikely.

âThereâs no way theyâre bringing her back this way. If they got there that way, they clearly had to go out the front,â Krieger said in an interview that aired Tuesday.
âYou canât even see her house necessarily, thereâs just so much brush and trees back here,â he added of the Catalina Foothills where Nancyâs home is located.

âItâs not going to be quick, and itâs going to be loud. Youâre going to get more attention at one oâclock in the morning in an area like this, than you are walking up to someoneâs front door.â
In the unlikely event the person â or people â who targeted Nancy did flee out the back, Krieger stressed they would have spent a considerable amount of timing scoping the area to ensure a swift getaway.
âIf someone used it back here, they would have had to come out a couple of times, they would have to be really familiar with wherever they parked, to get through here, to get back to wherever they parked,â he said.
âUnless you know exactly where youâre coming and going, youâre already kind of⌠you probably already lost your sense of direction in just a few seconds back here,â Krieger added.
Nancy is believed to have been snatched from her Tucson home during the early hours of Feb. 1.

Chilling security footage later recovered from her doorbell camera captured a masked man loitering around her doorstep the night police believe she was kidnapped.
Blood spatters were later discovered on her front door step.
As the search for the grandmother entered its second month, investigators still hadnât determined any credible leads or suspects in the case.