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As Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance nears one month, other Tucson families have been waiting decades for answers | CNN

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As Nancy Guthrie’s disappearance nears one month, other Tucson families have been waiting decades for answers | CNN

June 12, 1991, is a day Tammy Tacho will never forget. It was the last day she ever saw her 12-year-old little brother before he disappeared as she and her mother pulled out of the driveway.

James Hendrickson – known as Jimmy to his family – had reached into the car to kiss his mother goodbye, Tacho recalled.

“To me and my mom, that’s a horror movie to us, because that’s the last peck, or that’s the last kiss, and that’s the last hug, and that’s the last touching his hair that she got to do,” she told CNN.

More than three decades later, Jimmy has never been found, with his missing person case still open and cold.

Jimmy is just one of several people in the Tucson area who have been missing for over a decade without answers.

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A more recent disappearance in the area has drawn national attention: that of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of “Today” anchor Savannah Guthrie.

Nancy Guthrie vanished from her affluent neighborhood in the Catalina Foothills on February 1, and nearly a month after she disappeared, officials have yet to find the missing woman or charge someone in connection to her apparent kidnapping.

President Donald Trump posted on Truth Social he was “deploying all resources” to find her, and the Pima County Sheriff said he had “over 400 cops out here working every minute of the day” on the case. Her family on Tuesday announced they are offering up to $1 million for information leading to her recovery, and Savannah Guthrie also announced a $500,000 donation to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children, saying she hopes the attention given to her family will extend to others still in limbo.

As the search for Nancy Guthrie stretches into its fourth week, families like Jimmy’s have been waiting years for any new information about their loved ones.

A ‘mama’s boy’ who loved church and playing outdoors

On that summer day in Tucson, Tacho and her mother were heading to Douglas, Arizona, to meet her then-boyfriend’s family, she said. Jimmy didn’t want to go.

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“He was at that age. It was summer, he wanted to be out there playing and doing what boys do, and so he stayed behind,” she said.

Tacho remembers her brother as a “mama’s boy” who loved going to church, playing outside and was usually sporting red sweatpants — his favorite color.

“The worst thing is to drive out and watch him just wave at us,” Tacho said.

They left him with a family friend they had known since they moved to Tucson in 1987, Tacho said, and their two-day trip stretched into three after the car broke down.

When they finally got back into town, that’s when “the nightmare begins,” Tacho said.

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Jimmy’s mother filed a police report immediately when she found out her son was missing, but Tacho said the case wasn’t taken seriously right away. She recalled police thought Jimmy was just a runaway, but she said her family knew that wasn’t true. It took several weeks for her brother to be recognized as a missing person, she said.

“It’s been brought up during the initial investigation and subsequent theories, and that was that Jimmy walked away of his own free will and just was a runaway. That’s absolutely not what happened in this case. He didn’t leave his family of his own free will. He had no money to provide for himself, no transportation,” Tucson Police Department Detective David Miller told CNN affiliate KOLD last year.

There are several stories about what happened the night of June 11 and the next morning, Tacho said, which has left her family with more questions than answers.

The family friend watching Jimmy let him and another child go to her relative’s house to fix a fence, Tacho said. The other child told police that Jimmy was playing video games when he went to bed and heard noises during the night, but didn’t think anything of it, according to Tacho. The adult at the house said Jimmy left in the morning to go eat breakfast at a nearby school, she said, which was not unusual for her and her siblings to do.

Now, nearly 35 years later, Tacho is still pushing for answers. She still calls the police department and has hosted vigils and events to bring attention to her brother’s case, she said.

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“I worked at the job my mom worked at and hope that one day Jimmy would walk in there,” Tacho said. “I’ve come to accept … I’m not going to find him alive, but we need to find him.”

When her mother died a few years ago, she “left not knowing” what happened to Jimmy. “I don’t want to leave this world not knowing,” Tacho said.

She said she still lives in Tucson, just in case Jimmy ever comes back.

It’s a heavy burden the family of Karen Grajeda, who was 7 years old when she disappeared from her apartment complex in Tucson in 1996, is bearing too: The balancing of hope and trying to grieve.

“I still hang our Christmas picture every year,” her younger sister, Alejandra, wrote in a message to Karen posted by the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children. “My daughter is named after you. If you’re out there, if you’re alive, we’re here. Your whole family loves you and if you can come home, please do. We’ll always be waiting for you.”

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Karen was last seen playing outside her home on January 11, 1996, according to CNN affiliate KOLD.

The FBI and Tucson Police Department began searching for her right away, and family and community members joined the effort, but after months with few leads, there is still no trace of what happened, the NCMEC said. The organization works with law enforcement and other officials to find missing children, including publishing age-progression images.

“She was just an innocent child. That’s the memory I have of her, an innocent child who was always smiling. As her father, that’s the image I hold onto,” Karen’s father, Andres, told the organization.

Karen’s case is “in long-term missing person status,” the Tucson Police Department told CNN, and law enforcement continues to investigate the case as a non-family abduction and asks people to come forward with information, according to NCMEC.

“There’s nothing more innocent than a child, and they’re the most vulnerable people that had everything in front of them to be happy about, and it was all taken away from them, from their families,” Miller, the Tucson detective, told KOLD of the case in 2023. “Anybody who has kids probably feels the same way and that level of trust, I think, in a community when something like that happens, it diminishes it.”

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Nearly 30,000 children were reported missing in 2024, according to NCMEC.

Adults in the 20-39 age group are also at risk for abductions and kidnappings in the United States, according to data from the FBI. From February 2025 to February 2026, 53% of all abductions were of people in that age range. Nearly half of all abductions happened between current or former romantic partners, the data shows.

Marlana McElvaine’s family believes she’s no longer alive but is still asking the public to come forward to help them lay her to rest.

The 28-year-old and mother of two was in a relationship where she experienced domestic abuse when she went missing in 2010, her sister told CNN affiliate KGUN. Her boyfriend, whom she was living with at the time of her disappearance, is in prison on unrelated charges, KOLD reported.

“It’s a matter of someone coming forward and being brave and giving information. We ask that if it was their sister, their daughter, their child’s mother, that they put themselves in our shoes,” Janean McElvaine, her sister, told KOLD in 2023.

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Marlana McElvaine’s car was found abandoned, with her keys and work badge still inside, the station reported.

“You have no closure and there’s just this void in our hearts. We go on, we do the things we have to do, but we have no answers and we’re just hoping that someday … we can give her the proper goodbye that she deserves,” her mother Dian McElvaine told KOLD.

Dian McElvaine said in 2023 the family was working on getting a death declaration to help with the grieving process. Tucson police told KOLD at the time that once it is signed, the case will change from a missing person case to homicide.

Tucson police told CNN that the case is still currently classified “in long-term missing person status.”

People do go missing, Tucson Police Detective Doug Musick told KOLD at the time of her disappearance, but “it’s pretty rare for people to just abandon their children, their job, their family, their life.”

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Marlana McElvaine’s family thinks so, too.

“I knew from that moment that I got that call, I knew she was gone. Because I knew she wouldn’t have walked away from her life, she wouldn’t have walked away from her kids, she wouldn’t have left us — we’re all so close. I knew from that moment, I started grieving from that point forward because you know what, there’s no way she would have just left,” Dian McElvaine told KOLD.

Her family still talks about her and celebrates her birthday, her sister told KOLD. They also planted a tree in her honor.

The families, including the Guthries, are going through trauma that only other families who have been waiting for answers can understand, said Jimmy’s older sister Tacho, seeking some kind of closure.

“Nobody knows how we feel unless we’re going through it,” she said. “It’s so much pain and ache.”

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“I look for answers like if it was the first day, the second day, six months, a year, you know — we’re just never going to give up. We’re never going to give up,” Tacho said.

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U.S. military says it intercepted Iranian attacks on 3 Navy ships in Strait of Hormuz

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U.S. military says it intercepted Iranian attacks on 3 Navy ships in Strait of Hormuz

Children play in the water along the shore as a mix of bulk carriers, cargo ships, and service vessels sit offshore in the Strait of Hormuz off Bandar Abbas, Iran, Sunday.

Razieh Poudat/ISNA/AP


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Razieh Poudat/ISNA/AP

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — The U.S. military said it intercepted Iranian attacks on three Navy ships in the Strait of Hormuz and “targeted Iranian military facilities responsible for attacking U.S. forces,” highlighting the fragility of the month-old ceasefire between the two countries.

U.S. Central Command said in a social media post that U.S. forces intercepted “unprovoked Iranian attacks” and responded with self-defense strikes.

The U.S. military said no ships were hit. It said it doesn’t seek escalation but “remains positioned and ready to protect American forces.”

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Meanwhile, Iranian state media said the country’s armed forces exchanged fire with “the enemy” on Qeshm Island in the strait. It is the largest Iranian island in the Persian Gulf, home to about 150,000 people. It also houses a water desalination plant.

Iranian state media also reported loud noises and defensive fire in western Tehran. In southern Iran, explosions were heard near Bandar Abbas, semiofficial Iranian news agencies Fars and Tasnim said. The reports did not identify the source of the blasts.

Earlier in the day, a shipping data company reported that Iran has created a government agency to vet and tax vessels seeking passage through the crucial Strait of Hormuz.

The Iranian effort to formalize control over the channel raised new concerns about international shipping, with hundreds of commercial vessels bottled up in the Persian Gulf and unable to reach the open sea. Still, hope that the two-month conflict could soon be over buoyed international markets.

U.S. administration has sent mixed messages

The ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran has largely held since April 8. In-person talks between the two countries, hosted by Pakistan last month, failed to reach an agreement to end the war that began Feb. 28 when the U.S. and Israel launched strikes against Iran.

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Earlier Thursday, Tehran said it was examining the latest U.S. proposals for ending the war.

Iranian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Esmail Baghaei said the Islamic Republic was reviewing messages from Pakistan, which is mediating peace negotiations, but Iran “has not yet reached a conclusion, and no response has been given to the U.S. side,” Iranian state TV reported.

At the Vatican, U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio discussed Middle East peace efforts with Pope Leo XIV, whose opposition to the Iran war has led to open sparring with President Donald Trump.

The Trump administration has sent mixed messages on its strategy to end the war. The tenuous ceasefire and previous declarations that military operations were over have given way to new threats of bombing if Tehran does not accept a deal that allows for resumption of oil and natural gas shipments disrupted by the conflict.

Trump reiterated those after Thursday’s exchange of fire.

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“Just like we knocked them out again today, we’ll knock them out a lot harder, and a lot more violently, in the future, if they don’t get their Deal signed, FAST!” Trump said in a social media post.

Earlier this week, Trump suspended an attempt by the U.S. military to open a safe passage for commercial ships through the strait, saying the pause would allow more time to reach a peace agreement. An official in Saudi Arabia said Thursday that the key U.S. ally refused to support Trump’s effort to reopen the strait by force.

Pakistan says it expects a deal soon

Pakistani Foreign Minister Ishaq Dar spoke by phone Thursday with his Iranian counterpart, Abbas Araghchi, the Pakistani Foreign Ministry said.

“We expect an agreement sooner rather than later,” Pakistani Foreign Ministry spokesperson Tahir Andrabi said. “We hope the parties will reach a peaceful and sustainable solution that will contribute not only to peace in our region but to international peace as well.”

He declined to give a timeline.

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Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, speaking in televised remarks, said Islamabad remained in “continuous contact with Iran and the United States, day and night, to stop the war and extend the ceasefire.”

Meanwhile, direct talks between Israel and Lebanon were scheduled to resume next week in Washington, according to a U.S. official speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss plans for the closed-door meetings. The official said talks will be held May 14 and 15.

Iran creates agency to control passage at Hormuz

The report by shipping data firm Lloyd’s List Intelligence that Iran has established a new government agency to approve transit and collect tolls from shipping in the strait raised concerns over the freedom of navigation on which global trade depends.

The agency, called the Persian Gulf Strait Authority, is “positioning itself as the only valid authority to grant permission to ships transiting the strait,” Lloyd’s reported in an online briefing Thursday. Lloyd’s said the authority had emailed it an application form for ships seeking passage.

Iran has effectively closed the strait, a vital waterway for the shipment of oil, gas, fertilizer and other petroleum products, while the U.S. is blockading Iranian ports. The disruptions have sent fuel prices skyrocketing and rattled the global economy.

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The new Iranian agency formalizes an existing, albeit murky, vetting lane that takes vessels through the strait’s northern waters near the Iranian coastline. Iran controls which ships pass and, for at least some vessels, imposes a tax on their cargo.

Maritime law experts say Iran’s demands to vet or tax vessels violate international law. The United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea calls for countries to permit peaceful passage through their territorial waters.

The U.S. and its Gulf allies are pushing for the U.N. Security Council to support a resolution that condemns Iran’s chokehold on the strait and threatens sanctions. A prior resolution calling for reopening the strait was vetoed by Iran allies Russia and China.

Iran’s president reports lengthy meeting with new supreme leader

Top Iranian officials have said Supreme Leader Mojtaba Khamenei is playing a key role in overseeing negotiations with the U.S. But he remains in hiding and has not appeared in public since he was wounded early in the war.

Iranian President Masoud Pezeshkian said he met recently for more than two hours with Khamenei. In remarks aired Thursday on Iranian state television, Pezeshkian praised the supreme leader’s “sincere” behavior in what he said was a long in-person meeting.

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Khamenei has only released a series of written statements since being named supreme leader in March, replacing his father, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who was killed during the war’s initial strikes.

Saudi official says kingdom did not support U.S. effort to reopen strait

Trump did not consult with U.S. ally Saudi Arabia before launching the short-lived effort to force open a shipping passage through the strait, according to a Saudi official who was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

“We told them that we are not part of this and that they can’t use our territories and bases for this,” the official said Thursday.

The official said Saudi Arabia sent a message to Iran that the kingdom would not be involved in U.S. attacks related to Trump’s attempt to reopen the strait.

Trump suspended the effort, dubbed Project Freedom, during its second day Tuesday. Only two American-flagged merchant ships are known to have passed through the U.S.-guarded route. The U.S. military said it sank six Iranian small boats threatening civilian ships.

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Video: Why Trump’s Feud With the Pope Worries Republicans

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Video: Why Trump’s Feud With the Pope Worries Republicans

new video loaded: Why Trump’s Feud With the Pope Worries Republicans

Our national political correspondent Lisa Lerer explains the impact of President Trump’s spate of attacks against Pope Leo XIV ahead of the closely contested midterm elections.

By Lisa Lerer, Alexandra Ostasiewicz, Nikolay Nikolov, Edward Vega and Rafaela Balster

May 7, 2026

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Ted Turner remembered fondly for hosting wet T-shirt college nights after Braves games, like a true hero

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Ted Turner remembered fondly for hosting wet T-shirt college nights after Braves games, like a true hero

CNN founder and media mogul Ted Turner died Wednesday at 87. Well, scratch that. Those two labels don’t quite do him justice.

Let me try again: Ted Turner — the founder of CNN, a media mogul, a business tycoon, a world-renowned sailor, the creator of the superstation, the former owner of the Atlanta Braves, and a fierce supporter of wet T-shirt contests — died Wednesday at 87.

Whew. How is THAT for a list of accomplishments to take with you to the pearly gates? Did Ted leave it all out on the field, or what?

Yes, that last one is obviously why I’m here writing about Ted today. I know he was a pioneer in the TV industry. That’s his lasting legacy. But folks forget he was once the owner of the Atlanta Braves (and Hawks), and, more importantly, he used to host “wet T-shirt contests” during college nights at Braves games.

Ted Turner and Jane Fonda are pictured together in New York City circa 1990. (Robin Platzer/IMAGES/Getty Images)

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That’s right. We used to be a proper country. I say it all the time, but we really did used to have it all, and we just pissed it all away. I grew up in the 1990s when Ted’s TBS “superstation” was all the rage, and I loved it to death. Some of the best days of my life.

But boy, do I wish I could go back to the 1970s and take in a Braves games and then a wet t-shirt contest. Wrong era!

 

Ted Turner also managed the Braves for one single day

It’s not often that both Clay Travis and Darren Rovell post about the same thing, but here we are.

This is the effect Ted Turner had on folks. People from both sides of the aisle spent yesterday remembering Turner. Some, for his efforts in the media world.

BRAVES SIDELINE REPORTER’S EFFORT TO GET WOMAN’S PHONE NUMBER SPARKS CONTENTIOUS ONLINE DEBATE

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Others, of course, for his efforts in bundling Braves games and college wet t-shirt contests. And what an unreal price, too! Fifty cents for general admission to the Braves take on the Cubbies, and then you get to take in a wet t-shirt contest AND a Miller beer party?

From thisgreatgame.com:

“A crowd of 11,451, assumedly mostly male, showed up to watch the rotten Braves (13-24) take on the Chicago Cubs. Or at least that’s what they told their wives and girlfriends. But rain threatened the whole thing; for two hours, everyone sat around—interesting enough, no one left—before the first pitch finally took place.

“Somewhere around the sixth inning, the Braves announced that registration for the contest was under away, to be done in full view of the fans so they can see the pretty girls sign up; it took a while for the first woman to rev up the courage and walk to the table, but once she did, 42 others followed.”

Braves new owner Ted Turner dances with a team ball girl after the Braves ended a 13-game losing streak with an 8-7 win over the New York Mets in Atlanta on May 11. (Getty Images)

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This Ted Turner was a genius. A true genius. No wonder he was so beloved. All you get nowadays are stupid “Bring Your Dog to the Ballpark” promotions and “Star Wars Night.”

In fact, just to show you how miserable this era is compared to the 70s, the Atlanta Hawks were forced to cancel their “Magic City” promotion earlier this year because the NBA found it to be inappropriate.

And we had Ted Turner hosting wet t-shirt contests on COLLEGE NIGHT after games in the 70s! Again, we had it all, and we just pissed it away.

Anyway, some of Ted’s other feats include temporarily taking over the team for one game in 1977 after firing his manager during a 16-game losing stream (they lost), and later that year loading up the entire team in a yacht so they could watch him compete in the America’s Cup trials in Rhode Island.

For me, I will always remember him for the TBS superstation. Again, that’s my childhood. Turning on a Braves game every night at 7:05 was the best. This is back before streaming, so you didn’t really have access to much. I lived in Florida, so it was either the Marlins or Braves.

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Ted Turner, television executive and owner of the Atlanta Braves and Atlanta Hawks basketball team. (Getty Images)

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Unfortunately, the wet T-shirt contests did NOT make it to the 90s, which is shocking given … they were the 90s.

Oh well. Maybe it’ll come back one day soon. Although, I’m fairly certain the Braves don’t even do the full tomahawk chop anymore because the libs got fake-made about it, so I wouldn’t hold your breath.

RIP.

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