Gayle King has shared how 'heartsick' she is over the abduction of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of Today show anchor Savannah Guthrie.
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The clock is running down to find Nancy as the search enters its seventh day, with the 84-year-old reportedly deprived of the medication she needs to survive.
Now King, 71, who is Savannah's fellow daytime host as a star of CBS Mornings, has offered her view of the 'very, very scary' crisis.
'I just want this story to have a good outcome, that's all,' she said when approached in New York City outside a pre-Super Bowl event.
'And everyday you wake up and you hope that there's news, you go to bed, you hope that there's news, and my heart breaks when you see what Savannah and her family are going through,' the confidante of Oprah Winfrey told TMZ.
She observed that 'there's so many questions' that remain unanswered about the case, which she said 'hits home on many different levels.'
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Gayle King has shared how 'heartsick' she is over the shocking abduction of Nancy Guthrie, the mother of Today show anchor Savannah Guthrie; King pictured last month
After the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie (pictured with Savannah in May 2015) on Sunday, February 1, the Pima County Sheriff's office has been under fire for alleged missteps in the investigation
King added that Savannah is 'respected, admired and adored and we all want her to be okay and we want Nancy Guthrie back home.'
She noted she had 'reached out' to Savannah 'but I told her: "No response necessary." Believe me, Savannah's not checking her texts.'
King added that law enforcement were 'doing the best they can' - as the authorities face mounting criticism over their handling of Nancy's disappearance, with investigators descending on her home for the third time on Friday.
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From crime scene tape being removed and put up again four times, to a camera on the roof of the property only seemingly being found during this latest search, Pima County Sheriff's Office has come under fire for its management of the search.
FBI agents recovered a camera mounted to the roof of Nancy's home in Tuscon, Arizona, that was not found on two prior searches by local authorities.
A blue Subaru SUV believed to belong to Nancy was also towed from the residence to be processed as evidence for the first time in days.
Nancy disappeared from her $1 million home during the early morning hours of Sunday, February 1.
Chris Nanos, who has been the county's sheriff since 2020, has become a lightning rod for criticism.
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Chris Nanos, the county sheriff since 2020, has had public statements dissected by the national media, something he has acknowledged he is not used to
It started with his imprecise language. On Monday, February 2, Nanos gave a wide-ranging interview to NBC News and said: 'I think she was abducted... When you’re taken from your bed and you don’t want to go somewhere, that’s an abduction.'
Nanos later had to clarify he was speaking figuratively and that he had no evidence that Nancy literally ripped from her bed.
'I just know that this 84-year-old mom, grandma, went to bed that night and in the morning she was missing,' Nanos later told People.
Nanos has outright stated that the overwhelming media attention on him and his department is completely new for him.
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'So I apologize to you for ... Sometimes I'm speaking in generalities and ... and ... I'm not used to everybody hanging on to my words and then trying to hold me accountable for what I say. But I understand,' he said on Tuesday.
The Tucson Sentinel published an op-ed on Wednesday advising Nanos to wait to address reporters and the media as a whole until there are substantive updates.
'For the most part his answers were exasperated statements that could be summed up with a Scooby Doo "Ruh ROH...,"' the op-ed said, referring to his presser the day before.
Things didn't get any better for Nanos on Thursday, when he said, 'My guesswork is as good as yours,' when he was asked by reporters about potential suspects and motives.
During that same press conference, Nanos acknowledged that crime scene tape around Nancy's house was put up and taken down on four separate occasions.
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When asked about potential evidentiary issues this could have caused, Nanos said: 'I'll let the court worry about it. We follow the rules of law.'
Infrared footage obtained by Fox News's flight team revealed multiple FBI agents combing Nancy Guthrie's house for the third time on Friday
On Friday, the Daily Mail reported that the sheriff's department failed to deploy its fixed-wing Cessna aircraft (pictured) to search the area around Nancy's home immediately after she was reported missing
Aerial footage of FBI agents conducting a search at Nancy's home on Friday, February 6
Nanos also said he should have called in the FBI and various regional teams to assist with the case much sooner.
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On Friday, the Daily Mail reported that the sheriff's department failed to deploy its fixed-wing Cessna aircraft to search the area around Nancy's home immediately after she was reported missing.
The aircraft, equipped with high-resolution thermal imaging cameras capable of scanning vast swaths of desert terrain, remained on the tarmac for roughly half a day, sources close to the sheriff's department told the Daily Mail.
There was a staffing shortage that left the department without qualified pilots to fly the plane – a shortage people familiar with the situation blamed directly on Nanos.
Nancy was reported missing shortly after 12pm on Sunday. By 12.15pm, police arrived at her home in the Catalina Foothills, but the aircraft was not in the air until around 5pm that evening.
Nancy's supposed abductors have not contacted the Guthrie family, even though they have made multiple videos pleading for their mother's safe return
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Matt Heinz, a member of the Pima County Board of Supervisors, told the Daily Mail that failing to get the plane airborne may have cost investigators vital opportunities.
'The initial few hours of any kind of search like this are absolutely crucial,' Heinz said.
Sergeant Aaron Cross, president of the Pima County Sheriff's Deputies Association, said that trained aviators who could have crewed the aircraft had been transferred out of the Air Operations Unit in recent weeks.
Pima County Republican Party Chairwoman Kathleen Winn echoed Cross's claim.
As of Saturday afternoon, police have not identified a suspect or person of interest in the case.
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The Daily Mail approached the sheriff's department and the FBI for further comment.

