Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 22
FBI Tests $4 Million Nancy Guthrie Crypto Ransom as Harvey Levin Rejects Death-Note Apology Claim
Updated
Updated · Fox News · Jun 22

FBI Tests $4 Million Nancy Guthrie Crypto Ransom as Harvey Levin Rejects Death-Note Apology Claim

3 articles · Updated · Fox News · Jun 22

Summary

  • $4 million ransom demands in the Nancy Guthrie case are being probed by the FBI, which a federal law enforcement source said sent small crypto payments to a Bitcoin wallet to test whether the extortion messages were credible.
  • Harvey Levin said reports that a ransom note apologized for Guthrie's death were wrong: the note TMZ received said only that she was "scared but OK" and made no mention of her dying.
  • A separate stream of emails sent to TMZ later claimed Guthrie was dead and sought $100,000 for information, Levin said; he passed them to the FBI, but the sender was never paid.
  • Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos said the FBI has handled numerous ransom demands from the start, with some deemed bogus and others still potentially real.
  • Twenty weeks after the 84-year-old's suspected abduction from her Arizona home, her whereabouts remain unknown despite a reward topping $1.2 million.

Insights

With one arrest made, what does new DNA evidence reveal in the hunt for Savannah Guthrie's mother?
Is a global hacking ring targeting celebrity families, or is Nancy Guthrie's abduction a simpler, more personal crime?