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Nancy Guthrie’s neighbors flag camera glitching as experts explain Wi-Fi jamming
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TUCSON, Ariz. — The task force investigating the February abduction of “Today” co-host Savannah Guthrie’s mother has reportedly begun asking neighbors about a potential internet outage the morning of her abduction, prompting speculation that the kidnapper may have used a Wi-Fi jamming device or some other means to tamper with internet connectivity.
A move like that would add a layer of sophistication for the masked suspect who appeared on 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie’s front steps carrying a Walmart backpack and oddly placed holster.
“It shows an astounding amount of planning if they were used,” said Joshua Ritter, a Los Angeles defense attorney and Fox News contributor.
Neighbors told Savannah’s network, NBC, that a team of investigators sweeping the neighborhood Thursday asked specifically about internet outages.
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Savannah Guthrie and mother Nancy Guthrie (Courtesy of NBC)
According to NBC News, a couple who live adjacent to Guthrie’s home said they have four cameras on their property, noting the one closest to the missing 84-year-old’s home was “not available” during the overnight hours of Feb. 1 when she disappeared.
The neighbor said it seemed “uncanny” that the security video wasn’t available during that timeframe.
“That’s really weird, isn’t it?” the neighbor said.
This split image shows two views of the same utility box around the corner from Nancy Guthrie’s home in the Catalina Foothills of Tucson on Saturday, March 7, 2026. The Pima County Sheriff’s Department said it is aware of the open box and was looking into it as part of the investigation into the 84-year-old’s suspected abduction. (Michael Ruiz/Fox News Digital)
That prompted speculation about the so-called Wi-Fi jammers, which are illegal in the United States under Federal Communications Commission guidelines.
They’re not particularly high-tech. And they can be obtained online, which is potentially something investigators could track.
A Pima County Sheriff’s Department spokesperson also told Fox News Digital that investigators were aware of a damaged utility box around the corner from her home and looking into it as part of the investication.
“The junction box damage matters here too, because if connectivity was cut externally, it may have prevented devices from logging activity during the most critical window — which may have been the point,” said Jason Pack, a retired FBI supervisory special agent and the CEO of Media Rep Global Strategies.
The fact that the FBI and Google were able to recover video from Guthrie’s Nest doorbell camera, when the device was physically missing, and she did not have a cloud subscription, indicates a Wi-Fi jammer may not have been deployed at her front door, experts have explained.
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A Wi-Fi jammer used in an alleged residential burglary in February 2025. (West University Place Police)
“If they were using Wi-Fi jammers, then I would expect that we would not be able to see any video from the front door cameras,” said Morgan Wright, the CEO and founder of the National Center for Open and Unsolved Cases. “I took a look at some of the videos with the other gangs that use Wi-Fi jammers, and had one been up and running and persistent, you wouldn’t have gotten the clear pictures that we did from the front.”
Guthrie’s router wouldn’t detect the presence of a signal jammer, either, unless its internal logs recorded the sudden disconnects of multiple devices at the same time, like Guthrie’s exterior cameras, Wright said.
“The router won’t see the jammer as a device,” he told Fox News Digital. “It’s not attempting to connect. … All an RF (radio frequency) jammer does is flood a frequency band with noise so legitimate signals cannot be decoded.”
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These two images were released by the FBI, recovered from Nancy Guthrie’s Nest doorbell camera. It’s unclear whether they show the same person. (FBI)
So, unless the router in Guthrie’s home logged the disconnects, which not every make and model does, the jammer wouldn’t have a digital footprint for investigators to uncover, he said.
“Whether investigators could detect a jammer, the answer is almost certainly no,” Wright said. “It operates at the radio layer. The router records events at the network layer.”
Jammers function by spamming the airwaves on the same frequencies as Wi-Fi devices, interrupting their connections to the internet.
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Annie Guthrie, her husband Tommaso Cioni and Savannah Guthrie at their missing mother Nancy Guthrie’s home March 2 in Tucson, Ariz. (Fox News)
Early adopters to home Wi-Fi may have seen similar interruptions if they took a call on a wireless landline phone while surfing the internet. People who live in densely populated apartment buildings can also face interference from their neighbors. More advanced routers are more resilient to conflicting signals.
Commercial jammers have a range of about 10 to 30 yards, Wright said, and they get more effective the closer they are to the victim’s router. From a distance, they can cause lag and glitching but might not black out a camera’s signal entirely.
While devices used by the military and the U.S. Secret Service have a much greater range, they’re larger and use more power.
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Members of the media work outside the home of Nancy Guthrie, the missing mother of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie, Feb. 5, 2026, in Tucson, Ariz. (AP Photo/Caitlin O’Hara)
For that reason, he said it’s unlikely that neighbors saw an impact from a jamming device deployed at Guthrie’s home.
“If they say, ‘Well, I had an internet outage,’ it’s got nothing to do with an RF jammer,” he said of the neighbors. “That RF jammer would have to be high-powered, military-style stuff to affect a neighbor.”
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Wi-Fi jammers have no effect on wired security cameras or alarm systems. Some wireless cameras can store video locally and upload once an interrupted connection is restored. It depends on the make and model.
Jammers have been used by organized burglary rings to overcome home security systems in recent months, including a South America-linked group busted in Houston, Texas, last month. The same gang has ties to similar theft operations in California, New York, Florida and Wisconsin, according to authorities.
Brightened versions of photos released by the FBI show a “subject” on Nancy Guthrie’s property. (Provided by FBI)
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“We all know the South American theft groups have been using them in burglaries across the country,” said Lisa Miller, a retired detective and law enforcement executive at the Colorado Attorney General’s Office.
“I find it to be a plausible theory but not as likely,” she told Fox News Digital. “Here’s why. The video of the porch monster released by the FBI didn’t appear glitchy. At all. I mean, even police car laptops have glitched during traffic stops of someone with a jammer.”
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Savannah Guthrie visits the “Today” show at Rockefeller Plaza in New York Thursday, March 5, 2026. (Charles Sykes/Invision/AP)
The apparent antenna seen in the suspect’s pocket on that Nest video could more likely be part of a handheld radio, she said.
“I think it’s smarter to use that than a burner phone,” she said. “The criminals know what the FBI … can do. Of course, I’m opining based on experience, and it fits my theory that porch monster had an accomplice.”
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Other experts are also skeptical based on the added level of sophistication a jammer would bring.
“If they were forward-thinking enough to purchase and use one of those jammers, I think they would have done better than what we saw at the front door,” said Betsy Brantner Smith, a retired police sergeant and spokesperson for the National Police Association. “It is definitely a possibility, but that would require so much advanced thought and action. That brings us back to someone who knew her and very specifically targeted her.”
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On the other hand, if the suspect knew her well enough, they might have known she didn’t have a cloud subscription for the cameras she did have.
The Pima County Sheriff’s Department declined to comment on any potential internet outage in Guthrie’s neighborhood at the time of her abduction.
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Southwest
Talarico reportedly knew Colbert interview wouldn’t air on TV before he left to film it
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Democratic Senate candidate James Talarico knew his interview with late-night host Stephen Colbert wouldn’t air on television before he left for New York to do it, The New York Times reported on Saturday.
“Days before the trip, Mr. Colbert’s producers told them the network — nervous about federal regulators — would only post the interview online. The Talarico campaign had a choice: Cancel the trip and crow about the Trump administration trying to muzzle him, or say nothing, film the segment, and hope Mr. Colbert would tell his audience the story of federal interference,” the outlet reported.
Talarico sat down with Colbert in February for an interview that the show only posted to its YouTube channel. Colbert alleged CBS had prohibited them from airing the interview due to equal time constraints. However, CBS denied Colbert’s argument and said the show just needed to offer equal time to Talarico’s opponents.
“They said nothing and filmed. The YouTube clip gained more than 9 million viewers. Donations poured in. Internal campaign polling by his opponent showed the ground shift in Mr. Talarico’s direction,” the Times report continued.
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Texas state Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin, a Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate, speaks at a primary election watch party Tuesday, March 3, 2026, in Austin, Texas. (Eric Gay/AP Photo)
Talarico blamed the situation on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) at the time in multiple posts to social media.
His opponent, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, D-Texas, who lost the race last week to Talarico, put the blame on CBS and Colbert. Crockett argued in statements to reporters and interviews that the government did not shut down the interview.
FCC Chair Brendan Carr told reporters he was “highly entertained” during a press conference that followed the back-and-forth, and added that it was “one of the most fun days I’ve had on the job, watching the hilarity of how this story played out.”
Referring to Talarico, Carr said, “You had a Democrat candidate who understood the way that the news media works, and he took advantage of all your sort of prior conceptions to run a hoax, apparently for the purpose of raising money and getting clicks.”
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Texas Democratic Senate candidate Texas state Rep. James Talarico, D-Austin, waves before speaking for the first time since winning the Democratic nomination in Austin, Wednesday, March 4, 2026. (Eric Gay/AP Photo)
“As Jasmine Crockett herself came out yesterday afternoon and said, there was no censorship by the government here,” he added.
Some media observers are arguing James Talarico’s late-night interview controversy with Colbert helped him defeat firebrand Crockett in the Democratic Senate primary.
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“A lot of that money we got in late from Colbert went to Spanish advertising,” Chuck Rocha, an adviser to Talarico’s campaign, told the Times. The outlet reported that the Hispanic vote helped push Talarico to victory over Crockett in the end.
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Texas Gov Abbott issues warning of Chinese spying in medical tech
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Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is warning state health agencies about potential Chinese spying through medical technology.
Abbott directed Texas state health agencies and public university systems to address potential cybersecurity risks linked to Chinese-manufactured medical devices, citing concerns that sensitive patient data could be accessed by foreign actors.
“Governor @GregAbbott_TX released a letter directing state health agencies to mitigate data privacy concerns related to Chinese-sourced medical technologies,” Abbott’s office wrote Monday on X, releasing the letter.
“The Chinese Communist Party will not be allowed to spy on Texans.”
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Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott is warning of Chinese using medical technology to spy on Americans and his state. (Jay Janner/The Austin American-Statesman via Getty Images)
In Monday’s letter to the Texas Health and Human Services Commission (HHSC), the Department of State Health Services (DSHS), the Texas Cyber Command (TXCC), and public university system chancellors, Abbott said recent federal warnings about vulnerabilities in certain patient monitoring devices underscore the need for heightened safeguards.
“Maintaining Texans’ physical security and protecting their personal privacy, especially as it relates to something as important and intimate as personal medical data, is of paramount importance,” Abbott wrote. “I will not let Communist China spy on Texans. State-owned medical facilities must ensure there are safeguards in place to protect Texans’ private medical data.”
The directive follows notices issued by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warning that certain Chinese-manufactured patient monitors — including the Contec CMS8000 and Epsimed MN-120 — contain cybersecurity vulnerabilities that could allow unauthorized remote access and the exfiltration of protected health information.
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Chinese medical technology spying was first warned from the Trump administration and now has Texas GOP Gov. Greg Abbott taking action. (Omar Marques/SOPA Images/LightRocket)
“These notices confirm the warnings of experts who have elevated the proliferation of Chinese-manufactured smart medical devices across our healthcare system as a serious data privacy concern,” Abbott wrote.
Under Abbott’s order, HHSC, DSHS, and public higher education systems must review procurement policies to ensure compliance with Executive Order GA-48, catalog network-connected medical devices, and assess cybersecurity protections at state-owned medical facilities.
The Texas Cyber Command is tasked with reviewing whether certain devices should be added to the state’s prohibited technology list and recommending further safeguards.
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Agencies must submit reports and recommendations to the governor’s office by April 17.
Those responses will help Abbott propose legislation next session aimed at protecting Texans’ medical data from foreign adversaries.
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Senate campaign chief ‘optimistic’ for GOP majority despite darkening midterm climate
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PALM BEACH, Fla. — National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) chair Sen. Tim Scott says he remains “incredibly optimistic” the GOP can not only hold but expand its current 53–47 majority in the fall 2026 midterm elections.
But as Republicans battle stiff political headwinds as the party in power in the nation’s capital traditionally loses seats in the midterms, and as the GOP faces a rough political climate fueled by economic concerns amid persistent inflation and President Donald Trump’s underwater approval ratings, Scott isn’t sugar-coating things.
“There’s no doubt the climate has gotten more and more difficult by the day, it seems like at times,” Scott said in an exclusive interview with Fox News Digital at an annual economic conference in Florida hosted by the Club for Growth, an influential and politically potent conservative political group that pushes for fiscal responsibility.
Scott in early February gave fellow GOP senators some straight talk about the party’s chances in the midterm elections, when he briefed his colleagues at a closed-door meeting, according to sources in the room.
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National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) chair Sen. Tim Scott says he remains “incredibly optimistic” the GOP can not only hold but expand its majority. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)
The NRSC chair told Fox News Digital in December 2025 that in the battle for the majority, “54 is clearly within our grasp right now, but with a little bit of luck, 55 is on our side.”
Asked again in his Fox News Digital interview Saturday, Scott said, “I think we have a possibility of more than 53 seats.”
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“The good news is we have a president who made promises, he’s been keeping those promises, and we have been able to recruit the highest quality candidates anyone could want in every single battleground state,” Scott said.
Republicans battle stiff political headwinds as the party in power in the nation’s capital traditionally loses seats in the midterms. (Cornell Watson/Bloomberg/Getty Images)
Highlighting seats the GOP’s aiming to flip, Scott pointed to Georgia, where Republicans view first-term Sen. Jon Ossoff as the most vulnerable Democrat seeking re-election in 2026. He also spotlighted open Democratic-held seats in battleground Michigan, swing state New Hampshire and blue-leaning Minnesota.
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Scott said he’s “incredibly optimistic, not only about holding the majority, but still expanding the majority through Georgia, Michigan, New Hampshire and even Minnesota, we have a strong candidate.”
The candidate he was referring to in Minnesota is former NBC Sports reporter turned conservative activist and commentator Michele Tafoya.
Michele Tafoya is interviewed by Fox News Digital as she launches a Republican Senate campaign in Minnesota. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News)
But Democrats are targeting Maine, where longtime GOP Sen. Susan Collins is running for re-election in the blue-leaning northern New England state, and battleground North Carolina, where Republicans are defending an open seat in the race to succeed retiring GOP Sen. Thom Tillis.
Democrats are also trying to flip GOP-held Senate seats in Texas, Ohio, Alaska and Iowa, which are all red states.
“Voters are sick and tired of Trump and Senate Republicans’ toxic agenda raising prices and threatening their health care,” the rival Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee (DSCC) emphasized in a social media post. “Voters across the country are ready to send Senate Republicans packing this November.”
PAXTON SAYS HE’S STAYING IN THE RACE EVEN IF TRUMP BACKS CORNYN
In Texas, the NRSC is backing longtime GOP Sen. John Cornyn, who is now facing off with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a MAGA firebrand, in a costly and combustible primary runoff.
Trump said in early March, following the primary election where no candidate in the crowded Republican field cracked 50% to win the nomination, that he would soon make an endorsement.
Sen. John Cornyn of Texas, left, President Donald Trump and Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton. (Graeme Sloan/Bloomberg via Getty Images; )
The NRSC and Senate Majority Leader John Thune, R-S.D., who is also backing Cornyn, are concerned that a Paxton victory could give the Democrats a path to flipping the red seat, thanks to the state attorney general’s political baggage, including a plethora of past scandals and a current messy divorce.
“The one thing we know about John Cornyn is he will win Texas. If you want to have the clearest path of victory, John Cornyn is your guy,” Scott said. “President Trump is the only person that can make that a reality immediately through this runoff process.”
Scott said “we hope and pray” that Trump will endorse Cornyn. But he added: “The president is going to do what the president is going to do. I won’t pretend to influence his final decision, but I will say, I’m certainly praying for John Cornyn to be our our nominee.”
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Oil prices have shot up in the week and a half since the U.S. and Israel attacked Iran, instantly resulting in higher costs for gasoline across America. That’s a major concern for Republicans in a midterm election cycle where the economy, and specifically affordability, is the top concern of voters.
Gas prices in Newfields, New Hampshire, on March 9, 2026. (Paul Steinhauser/Fox News )
“I think the economy will continue to get better month over month,” an optimistic Scott predicted. “I think the rest of this year we’ll see unfolding good information, good facts about why the American people should focus on the Republican Party and keep us in the majority.”
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And with the annual tax filing deadline just more than a month away, Scott touted the numerous tax cuts kicking in this year in the GOP’s sweeping “big, beautiful bill,” which Trump signed into law in summer 2025.
Scott touted “a bigger tax return for millions of Americans, that’s great news. The more they see more money in their pockets, and the more they attribute it to the Republican Party, the better we’re going to do this election season.”
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