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The recipient of a batch of suspected ransom demands in the Nancy Guthrie case is pushing back against recent reports claiming the potential abductors were apologetic over the 84-year-old's purported death.
"I wanna talk about Nancy Guthrie and some communications I had with the FBI that I haven't talked about until now," Harvey Levin said in a video posted to TMZ's YouTube Monday afternoon. "But I want to start with these reports that this ransom letter that we received kind of apologizes to Savannah Guthrie and her family for the kidnapping and that Nancy was no longer alive. That was not in the ransom note that we received."
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos, whose department is the lead agency on the case, told Fox News Digital Monday that the FBI has been handling the investigation into numerous ransom demands, some bogus and some with potential to be real, since the beginning.
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Nancy Guthrie's missing person billboard is displayed in Phoenix, Arizona, on Feb. 6, 2026. Guthrie has been missing since early February 2026. (KSAZ)
He deferred comment to the bureau on the new reports, and the FBI did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
WATCH: What The FBI Told Harvey Levin | TMZ
"It is not in that ransom note at all," Levin said of the notes sent to TMZ. "It does say that she's scared but OK. But the ransom note makes no reference to Nancy Guthrie either dying or the kidnappers apologizing."
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Two photos of the suspect captured on Nancy Guthrie's porch were taken on different days, a source familiar with the matter told Fox News Digital. (FBI)
TMZ wasn't the only outlet to receive potential ransom demands, however. Local media also received similar messages through their online tip boxes, at least at first.
ABC News reported Monday that local media received a follow-up demand claiming that Guthrie had died and been buried.
A federal law enforcement source confirmed to Fox News Digital Monday that the FBI deposited small sums of crypto into a Bitcoin wallet to test the purported ransom demand's validity. It was not immediately clear whether the second note sender was credible — or whether any of the ransom demands were real.

Savannah Guthrie hugs a staff member during a visit to the Today show at Rockefeller Plaza in New York on March 5, 2026. (Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
They would, however, fit the "wrench attack" pattern that some investigators have floated in connection with the case, in which a "mastermind" computer hacker, probably overseas, could have hired local thugs to kidnap Guthrie in an effort to extort her daughter, "Today" co-host Savannah Guthrie.
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Sunday marked 20 weeks since Guthrie's suspected abduction from her home in the Catalina Foothills north of Tucson. Her whereabouts remain unknown as of Monday.
A series of later emails, however, sent by someone claiming to have knowledge of the case, referenced Guthrie's death, Levin added.
"That is from the person who sent us multiple emails saying that he knows or knew where Nancy Guthrie was and where the kidnappers were, and he wanted money in return for information," Levin said. "We passed that along to the FBI as we did the ransom note, but this person kept sending us email. And early on, he said, time is of the essence. And then a few days after the kidnapping, he said, time is no longer of the essence, meaning she wasn't alive."
That person had asked for $100,000 for the information — far less than the $4 million ransom demand, he added.
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Savannah Guthrie poses with her mother Nancy Guthrie during a production break while hosting NBC's "Today Show" live from Australia. (Photo by Don Arnold/WireImage)
"This person also said that he was afraid that he might be implicated," Levin explained. "He had a burglary on his record from I think he said 11 years before, and apparently he knew these kidnappers well enough that he was afraid he might implicated."
He purportedly said he wanted the money so he could go "underground" and avoid retribution.
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That person never got any money, he said. And when he offered to have TMZ put up the money just to see if it led to any kind of resolution, he said his sources at the FBI stopped responding.
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Anyone with information on Guthrie's case is asked to dial 1-800-CALL-FBI. There is a combined reward of more than $1.2 million for information that cracks the case.
Tips can be provided anonymously to Tucson's Crime Stoppers affiliate, 88-Crime, at 1-520-882-7463.

















































