The ink was barely dry on U.S. and Israeli airstrikes against Iran before the progressive left's most predictable voices lined up to denounce the operation. NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani, Reps. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez and Ilhan Omar, and California Gov. Gavin Newsom all condemned President Trump on Saturday, calling the strikes "illegal," "unjustified," and "catastrophic."
Not one of them spared a word for the Iranian regime's decades of sponsoring terrorism, pursuing nuclear weapons, or threatening American allies. The target of their outrage was not Tehran. It was the White House.
Ocasio-Cortez accused Trump of "dragging Americans "into a war they did not want, and alleged the president "does not care about the long-term consequences of his actions." She then delivered the sort of sentence designed more for a fundraising email than a foreign policy debate:
"This war is unlawful. It is unnecessary. And it will be catastrophic."
Omar followed the same script, accusing Trump of "unilaterally dragging this nation into an illegal and unjustified war with Iran without congressional authorization, without a clear objective, and without any imminent threat to the United States."
No mention of Iran's nuclear ambitions. No acknowledgment of the threat a nuclear-armed theocracy poses to every American interest in the Middle East. Just the familiar refrain: America is the problem, as New York Post reports.
The most revealing response came from New York's socialist mayor. Mamdani, the Ugandan-born pol who mere days earlier had briefly bonded with Trump over potential Big Apple housing investments during a visit to the White House, pivoted hard on Saturday. His statement read like a press release from an antiwar nonprofit, not the leader of America's largest city:
"Today's military strikes on Iran, carried out by the United States and Israel, mark a catastrophic escalation in an illegal war of aggression."
He continued:
"Bombing cities. Killing civilians. Opening a new theater of war. Americans do not want this. They do not want another war in pursuit of regime change. They want relief from the affordability crisis. They want peace."
The phrase "illegal war of aggression" is doing a lot of heavy lifting there. No court has ruled the strikes illegal. No international body has issued a determination. Mamdani simply declared it so, borrowing the language of left-wing activists and presenting it as fact.
Then came the pivot to local governance. Mamdani said he was in contact with Police Commissioner Jessica Tisch and emergency management officials to take "proactive steps, including increasing coordination across agencies and enhancing patrols of sensitive locations out of an abundance of caution." He also addressed Iranian New Yorkers directly:
"Additionally, I want to speak directly to Iranian New Yorkers: you are part of the fabric of this city, you are our neighbors, small business owners, students, artists, workers, and community leaders."
He added, "You will be safe here."
A mayor coordinating with law enforcement during a geopolitical event is perfectly reasonable. The rest of the statement reveals the priority. Mamdani spent far more energy condemning his own country's military action than addressing any threat posed by the regime those strikes targeted.
Gavin Newsom, never one to miss a moment with national implications, attempted a more careful version of the same argument. Writing on X Saturday, the California governor acknowledged what his progressive allies would not:
"The corrupt and repressive Iranian regime must never have nuclear weapons. The leadership of Iran must go."
Strong words. But they lasted exactly one sentence before Newsom retreated to the same conclusion as the rest:
"But that does not justify the President of the United States engaging in an illegal, dangerous war that will risk the lives of our American service members and our friends without justification to the American people."
So the regime must go, but doing anything about it is illegal and dangerous. This is the fundamental unserious posture of the modern Democratic foreign policy wing: acknowledge the threat, then oppose every action that might address it. The regime "must go," but not like this, not now, and never on a Republican president's terms.
Every one of these figures has, at some point, expressed alarm about Iran's nuclear program or its destabilizing influence in the region. Every one of them has demanded that presidents act to protect American interests abroad. Yet when action arrives, the response is instantaneous condemnation, not measured evaluation. Not "let's see the intelligence." Not "what were the objectives." Just: illegal, unjustified, catastrophic.
This is not foreign policy analysis. It is reflexive opposition dressed in constitutional language. Omar invokes "congressional authorization" as though she would vote for it if asked. She wouldn't. AOC frames the strikes as reckless while offering no alternative to a regime racing toward a nuclear weapon. Mamdani, who days ago was talking housing deals with Trump, now calls his military decisions "a war of aggression."
The pattern is always the same:
It costs nothing to say "the leadership of Iran must go" when you intend to block every path to making it happen.
Absent from every one of these statements is a simple question: What should the United States do about a theocratic regime pursuing nuclear weapons, funding terrorist proxies across the Middle East, and threatening the destruction of a key American ally?
The progressive left has no answer. It has only objections. And those objections arrive with suspicious speed, identical language, and zero engagement with the strategic reality that prompted the strikes in the first place.
When the threat is abstract, they talk tough. When the moment demands action, they reach for "illegal" and "unjustified" before the dust has settled. That is not a principle. It is positioning.
The White House delivered a new Homeland Security funding proposal to congressional Democrats late Thursday, marking the latest attempt to end a partial DHS shutdown that has now dragged into its third week.
A White House official called it a "serious counteroffer" and placed the burden squarely on the other side of the aisle.
Politico reported that spokespeople for Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries issued a joint statement saying they had "received the White House's counteroffer and are reviewing it closely." Schumer, for his part, seemed less than interested in moving toward a deal.
"They're just trying to pass paper back and forth with no real changes."
That's a curious posture for a party that claims to be worried about critical government services going unfunded. The funding lapse began Feb. 14, and no congressional action is expected until the middle of next week at the earliest, with the Senate out of town until Monday and the House not voting until Wednesday.
Washington is on autopilot. And Democrats seem perfectly comfortable leaving it that way.
The White House official framed the stakes bluntly:
"Democrats need to make a move to end the shutdown before more Americans are harmed by a lack of funding for critical services like disaster relief."
President Trump reinforced the urgency during his State of the Union speech, pointing to a recent snowstorm that hammered parts of the Northeast as a concrete reason to restore DHS funding. The partial shutdown touches agencies responsible for everything from immigration enforcement to airport security to cyber infrastructure.
Yet the agencies Democrats claim to be most concerned about, ICE and Border Patrol, have been largely unaffected. Funding put in place last year by the party-line GOP megabill has kept enforcement operations running.
FEMA officials said earlier this month that the main federal disaster fund "has sufficient balances to continue emergency response activities for the foreseeable future," though expected new disbursements could drain it quickly.
So the shutdown's real pressure point isn't enforcement. It's disaster relief. And Democrats are the ones holding it hostage.
Democrats have vowed to block DHS funding until they get changes to Trump's immigration enforcement tactics. Their joint statement made the goal explicit:
"Democrats remain committed to keep fighting for real reforms to rein in ICE and stop the violence."
The "violence" they reference traces to an incident in January when federal agents killed two people in Minneapolis. No further details about the circumstances were provided. But the framing tells you everything about the strategy: treat enforcement actions as inherently violent, demand concessions on that basis, and hold disaster relief funding as leverage until you get them.
This is not a negotiating position. It is a political campaign disguised as one.
The Senate failed Monday to advance legislation that would restore the flow of cash to DHS. Democrats held the line. They would rather let the shutdown grind forward than allow the administration to enforce immigration law without congressional micromanagement.
Consider what Democrats are asking the public to believe simultaneously:
You cannot claim a crisis demands urgent action while also refusing to act unless your unrelated conditions are met. One of those things is a lie. The shutdown is either an emergency or it's a useful pressure tool. Schumer and Jeffries are treating it as both, depending on which microphone they're standing in front of.
The honest answer: not much, at least for several days. Congress is scattered. The Senate won't reconvene until Monday. The House won't vote until Wednesday. The White House has put an offer on the table. Democrats say they're "reviewing" it.
The pattern here is familiar. Democrats slow-walk negotiations, blame the administration for the shutdown they themselves are sustaining, and wait for media coverage to build pressure in their direction. The strategy depends on one assumption: that voters will blame the party in the White House for any disruption, regardless of who is actually blocking the funding bill.
That assumption may have worked in previous eras. It's harder to sustain when the enforcement agencies at the center of the dispute are still operating, and the funding being held up is for disaster relief that Americans across the political spectrum depend on.
The White House made its move. The offer is on the table. The only question now is whether Democrats want to govern or whether they'd rather keep passing paper back and forth while the clock runs.
The Department of War is moving U.S. military assets toward Iran and putting options in front of President Donald Trump, according to press secretary Kingsley Wilson, who said the goal is to make clear that America “means business” as negotiations with Iran intensify.
Wilson told The Daily Caller that the Department of War’s role is to prepare, not posture. The message to Tehran, she suggested, is that diplomacy is on the table, but it is not the only tool in the box.
Speaking “at the White House’s media row” following the president’s State of the Union address, Wilson framed the military buildup as readiness built for a commander in chief who sets the direction, then expects the bureaucracy to execute. The Daily Caller shares.
Wilson put it plainly:
"At the Department of War, our job is to plan. We have contingency plans for every operation and every scenario. If the president says go, we need to be ready to go whatever option he chooses. So we are presenting options to the president,"
That is how serious governments operate. They do not outsource national security to vibes. They do not confuse speeches with strategy. They plan, they position, and they ensure the president has credible choices in real time.
Wilson emphasized that Trump’s instincts run toward peace and diplomacy, but she also made the Department of War’s mission clear: prepare for whatever comes next, including the possibility that Iran refuses to deal.
"This is a president who seeks peace and who always pursues diplomacy first, but it is our job to make sure that we’re prepared should he choose a different course of action, and we have to have the assets in place to do it,"
The sequence matters. Diplomacy is not “forever talks.” It is talks backed by consequences. In the real world, the credibility of your diplomacy depends on whether your adversary thinks you can and will act.
The White House is “trying to make a nuclear deal with Iran,” and it is not pretending that America is out of options if Iran declines to commit.
In a comment to Reuters, the White House warned that if no deal is made, it “will have to do something very tough like last time,” a reference to “the June strikes on the country’s nuclear facilities.”
That is not inflammatory language. It is an attempt to restore a basic reality that too many foreign regimes and too many American elites forgot: U.S. warnings are supposed to mean something.
Wilson argued that Iran’s leadership, and the Iranian people, are not guessing about what American power can look like when it is actually used. She said the administration is moving aircraft and other assets so the message lands before a shot is fired.
"We’ve got a lot of assets over there, a lot of aircraft over there, and we’re going to make sure that the Iranian people know we mean business, and the regime and the mullahs there particularly, know we mean business. They remember midnight hammer and the success of that operation. They also, like the rest of the world and our enemies, watched the Maduro raid,"
The specifics of “midnight hammer” and “the Maduro raid” are not spelled out in the provided material, but Wilson’s intent is unmistakable. She is invoking recognizable demonstrations of U.S. capability to shape Iran’s decision-making now.
Deterrence is not a slogan. It is a reputation that has to be maintained. When it fades, adversaries test you. When it is restored, they start looking for exits.
The center of gravity in this story is Trump’s red line. The material states that during his Tuesday State of the Union address, Trump “drew a red line on negotiations with Iran” and said Iran must commit to not building a nuclear weapon.
Wilson echoed that and urged Iran to choose the deal while it can:
"They see what the United States military, and only the United States military is capable of doing so, it would be very wise for them to make a deal with this president. And I would also add that the president has been clear, whether on the campaign trail or throughout his entire presidency, that Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. That is a red line, and we at the Department of War are in full support of that initiative,"
This is what serious leadership looks like. A line is drawn, publicly, and the apparatus of the state is aligned behind it.
America can debate tactics. It should. But a nuclear Iran is not the kind of problem you solve with clever messaging or another round of bureaucratic process. You prevent it, or you live with the consequences.
Wilson’s comments also land as an indictment of a broader habit in Washington: to treat hard problems as permanent, and to treat American strength as something embarrassing that must be apologized for before it is deployed.
Here, the posture is different. The Department of War says it is moving assets. The White House says Iran must commit. And the administration is signaling that if diplomacy fails, decisions will not be deferred indefinitely.
That does not guarantee an outcome. It does restore leverage.
And in a world where adversaries watch for hesitation, leverage is the difference between peace through strength and chaos through wishful thinking.
The regime in Tehran is being handed a choice, and the clock is not going to stop for another round of talking points.
Savannah Guthrie posted an emotional video to Instagram on Tuesday, Feb. 24, pleading for the public's help in finding her mother, Nancy Guthrie, who has been missing from her Arizona home since the early morning hours of Feb. 1. The Today anchor announced the family is offering a reward of up to $1 million for information leading to Nancy's recovery.
Nancy was last seen on Jan. 31. Nearly a month later, local, state, and federal authorities have flooded the area, combing rugged desert terrain for any sign of her or clues that could lead investigators to answers. So far, no resolution.
In the same video, Guthrie said the family is donating $500,000 to the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children.
Guthrie's message carried the weight of someone who has spent weeks oscillating between faith and grief. She acknowledged that her mother may never come home alive, but refused to abandon hope entirely.
"We also know that she may be lost; she may already be gone. She may already have gone home to the Lord that she loves, and is dancing in heaven with her mom and her dad and her beloved brother, Pierce, and with our daddy."
She followed that with a statement that captured the unbearable limbo of a family with no answers:
"And if this is what is to be, then we will all accept it. But we need to know where she is. We need her to come home."
That need, the need simply to know, is something that transcends celebrity. It is the most basic human demand in the face of loss: give us certainty, even if it's the worst kind. People reported.
Guthrie said she and her siblings still believe a miracle is possible, invoking her sister's phrase to describe where the family stands spiritually.
"We still believe. We still believe in a miracle. We still believe that she can come home. Hope against hope, as my sister says. We are blowing on the embers of hope."
Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos told NBC News on Feb. 20 that the investigation is "still growing." He acknowledged the frustration that comes with a case this prolonged.
"It's never fast enough for the sheriff. I want it like you: 'Come on, guys, let's go, let's go, let's find her.' But the reality is that I also know that sometimes things take time."
The sheriff's department previously asked residents in Nancy's neighborhood to submit surveillance footage dating back to Jan. 1. Authorities zeroed in on two specific time windows:
They specifically requested a video showing cars, traffic, pedestrians, or anything unusual.
There has been speculation about a masked man captured on doorbell camera footage near Nancy's home. When asked on Feb. 23 whether that individual had also been caught on camera at the home on a prior occasion, Nanos was direct.
"There is no evidence to support that. It is speculative at best and remains part of an ongoing investigation."
That answer tells us the investigation remains open and active, but offers little comfort to a family running out of days to hope.
What elevates Guthrie's appeal beyond a personal tragedy is her willingness to point beyond her own family's pain. She acknowledged the countless Americans who live in the same terrible uncertainty, families without national platforms or million-dollar rewards.
"We also know that we are not alone in our loss. We know there are millions of families that have suffered with this kind of uncertainty."
"We are hoping that the attention that has been given to our mom and our family will extend to all the families like ours who are in need and need prayers and need support."
That is a statement worth taking seriously. The disappearance of a television anchor's mother commands resources and coverage that most missing persons cases never receive. The $500,000 donation to NCMEC suggests Guthrie understands this disparity and is trying to use her visibility to widen the circle of attention.
Every community in America has families living in this limbo. Many of them will never trend on social media. Their cases will never warrant a press conference from a county sheriff. That is a failure worth reckoning with, and it does not diminish what the Guthrie family is enduring to say so.
Guthrie closed her video with the kind of plea that needs no editorial commentary:
"Help us bring our beloved mom home so that we can either celebrate a glorious, miraculous homecoming or celebrate the beautiful, brave, courageous and noble life that she has lived."
Nearly a month of searching. Federal, state, and local agencies are deployed across the Arizona desert. A family offering everything it has for a single piece of information. And still, silence from the terrain that swallowed Nancy Guthrie.
The embers are fading. But they haven't gone out.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-MA) rose to her feet for Donald Trump on Tuesday night. Read that again.
The progressive icon from Massachusetts gave the president a standing ovation during his State of the Union address after he called on Congress to pass the Stop Insider Trading Act. Other Democrats similarly stood in applause. The moment was brief, bipartisan, and deeply telling.
Trump's appeal was direct and left little room for evasion:
"As we ensure that all Americans can profit from a rising stock market, let's also ensure that members of Congress cannot corruptly profit using inside information. Pass the Stop Insider Trading Act without delay."
The chamber responded. Warren, who has long backed similar legislation, was among the Democrats who couldn't stay seated. She was cheering him on.
Trump noticed. And he couldn't resist.
"They stood up for that — I can't believe it."
Then came the knife. "Did Nancy Pelosi stand up for that?" the president asked. His own answer: "Doubt it."
There's a reason Trump singled out the former House speaker, the New York Post reported. Republicans have long needled Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) over well-timed trades both she and her husband have made over the years. Her net worth sits at more than $269 million, according to Quiver Quantitative. That's a staggering sum for someone whose career has been in public service.
The Stop Insider Trading Act would bar lawmakers, their spouses, and dependent children from buying publicly traded stocks. It also mandates that lawmakers, their spouses, and dependent children give a seven-day public notice before selling off a stock. The bill has cleared a House committee but is awaiting a full vote in the lower chamber.
Pelosi, for her part, glared at Trump. She sat next to Rep. Ro Khanna (D-CA), took some notes, and wore a "Release the Files" button. She did not, apparently, stand.
The visual contrast told the whole story. Warren, the leftist firebrand who has built a brand on fighting corporate greed, applauds a Republican president. Pelosi, the woman whose household has profited handsomely from the stock market while she helped write the rules governing it, sat stone-faced.
If you ever wanted proof that congressional stock trading reform cuts across ideological lines and threatens the right people, Tuesday night was it.
Warren's moment of agreement didn't last long. She later ripped into President Trump's State of the Union address. The standing ovation was a momentary concession to policy reality before the partisan programming kicked back in.
But that's exactly what makes the moment valuable. Warren has long backed similar legislation. She knows the issue polls well. She knows the public is furious about lawmakers trading on information unavailable to ordinary Americans. When Trump put it on the table in front of 50 million viewers, she couldn't pretend otherwise.
Warren was also seen standing after Trump said that Iran can't be allowed to obtain a nuclear weapon. Two standing ovations for Trump in one night from a woman who has made opposing him a central feature of her political identity. The issues were simply too popular, and the audience too large, to sit through.
That's the power of picking the right fights. When you champion policies that Americans overwhelmingly support, you force your opponents into uncomfortable positions. They can either applaud and concede the point or sit on their hands and explain to voters why they oppose banning congressional insider trading.
Not every Democrat handled the evening with Warren's pragmatism, however brief it was.
For the second year in a row, Rep. Al Green was ejected from the House chamber during Trump's speech, this time for waving around a sign that read, "Black People Aren't Apes!" The interruption was a stunt in search of a moment that existed only in Green's imagination. No one in the chamber called anyone an ape. The sign responded to an argument no one was making.
Reps. Ilhan Omar(D-MN) and Rashida Tlaib (D-MI) left early after repeatedly heckling Trump throughout the speech. They interrupted, they shouted, and then they walked out.
This is the state of the Democratic caucus in 2026. One faction stands and applauds when the president champions popular reform. Another faction waves signs, screams into the void, and storms out of the building. The serious members and the performative members are increasingly impossible to tell apart from a distance, which is precisely the problem for a party trying to rebuild credibility with the American middle.
The Stop Insider Trading Act deserves a vote. It's sitting in the lower chamber right now, already through committee, waiting for leadership to bring it to the floor. The policy is straightforward:
This isn't complicated. Americans understand, instinctively and correctly, that the people writing regulations for industries shouldn't be trading stocks in those same industries. The fact that it took this long to get a serious push tells you everything about who benefits from the status quo.
Pelosi's 2020 State of the Union moment was tearing up Trump's speech in full view of the cameras. In 2026, she sat silently while her colleagues applauded a bill designed to end the exact kind of trading that made her household fabulously wealthy.
Some protests are louder when they're quiet.
Vice President JD Vance has been quietly perfecting shokupan, the pillowy Japanese milk bread that commands cult followings at high-end bakeries, and his wife just told the world about it.
Usha Vance shared the details during a joint appearance with the Vice President on Saturday's episode of "My View With Lara Trump," praising her husband's dedication to the craft.
"He's been working on it for a while and he does it really well. Almost as well, or as well, as some of the restaurants that we get it from."
The Vice President, never one to undersell himself, interjected: "I'd say almost as well."
The couple's appearance painted a picture of domestic normalcy that stands in sharp contrast to the gossip mill that churned around them over the past year.
Vance's baking skills have apparently come a long way, the Daily Beast reported. When Lara Trump asked him to name the best and worst dish he ever cooked for his wife, the Vice President didn't hesitate to revisit the disaster.
"Usha is a vegetarian, and I am not. So, I'm thinking to myself, what does a vegetarian eat? Vegetables, dairy, and bread. I got crescent rolls, rolled them out into a pizza shape, and put vegetables and ranch on top, and stuck it in the oven for 30 minutes."
The verdict was swift and self-inflicted.
"It was disgusting. Like, it was actually inedible."
Vance chuckled at the memory, adding that "it's amazing that the relationship lasted." Twelve years of marriage and a fourth child on the way suggest the relationship has done more than last. Usha added that her husband "doesn't believe in recipes," and the pair laughed off the incident together.
The appearance matters beyond its lighthearted content. Usha Vance was spotted several times without her wedding ring last year, feeding speculation that the couple's marriage was under strain. Vance was also the subject of tabloid chatter after being filmed in what was described as an intimate embrace with Erika Kirk, the widow of Charlie Kirk, during a Turning Point USA event.
None of that seemed to register on Saturday's episode. The Vances looked like what they presented themselves as: a married couple expecting another baby, ribbing each other about bad cooking.
There's a lesson here about the political media ecosystem. Every awkward photo and missing accessory gets fed into a narrative machine that runs on inference and innuendo. Sometimes the simplest explanation is the correct one. Sometimes a ring is at the jeweler. Sometimes a hug is a hug.
The shokupan detail is the kind of biographical color that humanizes a political figure without the usual stagecraft. Vance has long introduced himself as a "conservative hillbilly from Appalachia," a framing that served him well on the campaign trail and in the cultural conversation around his memoir. The self-taught baker working his way through Japanese bread techniques doesn't contradict that identity. It rounds it out.
Curiosity is not a betrayal of where you come from. A guy raised in a middle-class Ohio family who picks up a demanding baking technique because he wants to is the kind of story that cuts against every lazy caricature of conservative America as intellectually incurious or culturally monolithic. The left loves to sort people into boxes. Vance keeps refusing to fit.
Lara Trump, who has hosted "My View" since February of last year, drew out the couple with the kind of ease that comes from shared familiarity. She recently recounted her own early dating stories with Eric Trump on Miranda Devine's podcast, including his memorable first impression after learning she attended culinary school.
"He looked at me, and he grabbed my stomach, and said, 'Wow, you're too skinny for any of your food to taste good. You must be a horrible chef.'"
Bold opening line. It apparently worked.
Saturday's episode was not hard news. It was not meant to be. But in a political climate that treats every personal detail as ammunition, two couples trading embarrassing kitchen stories on camera carries its own quiet weight. The Vances showed up, laughed at themselves, and let the bread speak for itself.
Crescent roll pizza with ranch. Twelve years later, shokupan. People grow.
A Tucson couple discovered a pair of blood-stained gloves and a rock with dried blood in the Arizona desert, roughly a mile from the home of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of Today show host Savannah Guthrie. The couple, who asked to remain anonymous, informed the Pima County Sheriff's Department after stumbling upon the suspicious black gloves on the ground about 10 feet apart near Guthrie's Tucson neighborhood.
Guthrie was reported missing three weeks ago. Ring camera video from the night of her disappearance captured a pair of gloves on the hands of an armed intruder. Drops of blood identified as belonging to Guthrie were discovered just outside the front door of her home.
Investigators interviewed the couple, and evidence collection personnel remained at the scene until 2 a.m. The rock reportedly bore at least one blood splatter, and some analysts say it resembled blood spatter patterns. Whether the gloves and the rock are connected to Guthrie's case remains to be determined.
This is not the first set of gloves recovered. Several gloves have been found by investigators, including at least one sent to a DNA lab for testing. According to authorities, those results did not produce a hit in the federal DNA database of known criminals or match other DNA found inside the Guthrie home.
That dead end has pushed the investigation into more advanced territory, as Breitbart reported. Further searches in genealogical databases for possible matches to a suspect's relatives are reportedly underway. Genealogical DNA tracing has cracked cold cases before. Whether it yields results here depends on the quality of the sample and the breadth of the database matches available.
The Feb. 11 discovery in the Catalina Foothills adds another data point for investigators working on a case that has generated enormous public interest. The reward for information has increased from $50,000 to more than $200,000.
Public engagement in the case has been extraordinary and, in some ways, a double-edged sword. The Sheriff's 911 Communications Center has fielded hundreds of daily calls related to the case, with more than 32,000 to date. That figure is 10,000 more than the same period from a year ago.
The volume reflects genuine concern, but it also strains resources. Investigators have urged the public to submit only actionable tips to keep emergency lines available. The FBI tip line, 1-800-CALL-FBI, remains active for anyone with substantive information.
There is a tension in cases like this between the public's desire to help and the operational reality that law enforcement faces. Every call has to be processed. Every lead has to be assessed. When tens of thousands of those calls come in, the ones that matter can get buried under the ones that don't. Good intentions can slow the very investigation people are trying to support.
The Pima County Sheriff's Department is investigating what all available evidence points to as an abduction. An armed intruder on camera. Blood at the front door. An 84-year-old woman is gone.
The gloves found a mile from her home may prove critical, or they may prove coincidental. The desert terrain around Tucson is vast. Items turn up. But the proximity to Guthrie's home, combined with the blood staining, makes them worth every hour investigators spent at that scene.
The lack of a DNA match in federal databases is notable. It means that whoever was inside that home, assuming the tested gloves are connected, has no prior criminal record flagged in the system. That narrows some possibilities and opens others. The genealogical database search is the next logical step, a method that relies not on the suspect having a record but on a relative having submitted DNA to a commercial testing service.
An 84-year-old woman does not vanish from her home without someone knowing something. The physical evidence is accumulating. The public attention is immense. The reward money is substantial. Somewhere between the ring camera footage, the blood at the door, the gloves in the desert, and 32,000 phone calls, there is a thread that leads to Nancy Guthrie.
Investigators need to find it before the trail goes cold.
A Tucson man detained for hours during a SWAT operation on February 13 says he has nothing to do with the disappearance of Nancy Guthrie, the 84-year-old mother of "Today" show host Savannah Guthrie. His lawyer confirmed that Luke Daley, 36, was the subject of two search warrants served that day by Pima County deputies and FBI agents. He was released without charges.
His attorney, Chris Scileppi, stated in a local outlet that left no room for ambiguity:
"Mr. Daley has no link whatsoever to Nancy Guthrie and has no information related to her kidnapping."
Scileppi also confirmed that Daley's mother was detained alongside him during the operation. Both walked free. A second ex-con linked to Daley in online speculation, 32-year-old Kayla Day, was already sitting in the Pima County Adult Detention Complex when the raid took place, jailed for allegedly skipping court dates on unrelated charges.
Neither has been accused of involvement in the Guthrie case. Authorities have said almost nothing publicly. A public information officer for the Pima County Sheriff's Department told Fox News Digital simply:
"We have no additional comments at this time besides the information released in our updates."
The February 13 operation drew dozens of law enforcement vehicles to the intersection of Camino de Michael and East Orange Grove Road in Tucson, approximately two miles from Nancy Guthrie's home in the Catalina Foothills neighborhood. The operation went on for hours. A Range Rover was towed from a nearby Culver's restaurant, though it was not immediately clear whether it belonged to Daley, as Fox News reports.
The scene was large enough to rattle the neighborhood. One unnamed neighbor told Fox News Digital he was "pissed," adding that "everyone wants Nancy Guthrie found." The frustration is understandable. Guthrie is believed to have been abducted from her home around 2:30 a.m. on February 1, and weeks later, the public still has precious few answers.
The FBI released photos on February 10, 2025, showing a masked "subject" on Guthrie's property, described as between 5 feet, 9 inches and 5 feet, 10 inches tall. Beyond that, the investigation has produced more questions than clarity.
The fact that Daley and Day have not been charged in connection with the Guthrie case does not mean they are model citizens. Their rap sheets tell a different story entirely.
Daley was arrested by the Marana Police Department on May 15, 2025, accused of:
A vehicle search turned up a 9mm pistol with a loaded magazine, about a thousand opioid pills, and $1,366 in cash. Court documents referenced "indicators of illegal drug transactions" in "plain view." He appeared in court on January 12, is currently out of custody, and his jury trial was rescheduled from February 24 to May 19.
Day was arrested the same day at the same Walmart location and faces her own drug and weapons charges. She was arrested again on March 19, 2025, on four more drug-related charges. A warrant was issued for her arrest in January for missing court dates. She is currently being held without bail. When her February 18 court date arrived, she refused transport. The hearing was rescheduled to February 27, and a judge ordered the Pima County Sheriff's Department to transport Day "by any means necessary."
A thousand opioid pills in one vehicle. A felon with a loaded handgun. A co-defendant who simply refused to show up to her own court date. These are the kinds of cases that illustrate why the revolving door of the criminal justice system remains one of the most urgent public safety failures in the country.
When law enforcement goes quiet, speculation floods the gap. Daley and Day have faced intense online scrutiny since the SWAT operation, with internet sleuths drawing connections that authorities have not endorsed. The proximity of the operation to Guthrie's home, the scale of the law enforcement response, and the involvement of the FBI were enough to set social media ablaze.
Scileppi's statement to local media tried to put the speculation to rest:
"Like the entire Tucson community, both Mr. Daley and his mother are hopeful that Nancy will be returned to her family unharmed."
Day's lawyer, Nicholas Brereton, declined to comment when contacted by Fox News Digital. Scileppi also declined direct comment to Fox News Digital, having already issued his statement through a local outlet.
The online frenzy is a predictable consequence of an information vacuum surrounding a high-profile case. When law enforcement provides nothing beyond boilerplate non-answers, the public does its own detective work. Sometimes that work is insightful. Often it is reckless. In this case, two people with serious criminal histories but no apparent connection to the abduction have become the center of a narrative that authorities have neither confirmed nor convincingly dispelled.
The core reality remains: an 84-year-old woman was taken from her home in the middle of the night, and three weeks later, the public knows almost nothing about who did it or why. The FBI has released grainy photos of a masked figure. Local law enforcement is issuing the bureaucratic equivalent of "no comment." And two felons with drug records are dominating the public conversation about a case they may have nothing to do with.
The Guthrie family deserves answers. The Tucson community deserves transparency. And the investigators working this case deserve the space to do their jobs without online mobs identifying suspects for them.
But silence from authorities is not the same thing as progress. At some point, the people asking questions are not the problem. The people refusing to answer them are.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals has temporarily blocked California from enforcing a law that would bar federal immigration agents from wearing masks during operations. The full stay halts the state's mask ban while litigation continues, preserving a lower court's earlier decision that found the law unconstitutionally singled out federal officers.
Newsmax reported that U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi announced the ruling on X:
"The 9th Circuit has now issued a FULL stay blocking California's ban on masks for federal law enforcement agents."
She followed with a pointed message about the stakes involved:
"Law enforcement officers risk their lives for us, only to be doxxed by radical anti-police activists. Unacceptable."
That word, "doxxed," is doing a lot of work. And it should. Because that's exactly what California's law was designed to facilitate, whether its authors admit it or not.
California's law took effect Jan. 1. Dubbed the "No Secret Police Act" by supporters, the measure signed by Gov. Gavin Newsom made it a misdemeanor for many law enforcement officers, including federal officers, to wear a mask or other disguise while interacting with the public during official duties. It carved out exceptions for:
On its face, the law presented itself as a transparency measure. In practice, it was a weapon aimed squarely at federal immigration enforcement. Masked federal immigration operations drew protests and public scrutiny in 2025, and Sacramento responded not by engaging the underlying policy debate but by trying to strip agents of basic operational safety.
The Trump administration argued the measure would endanger agents and intrude on federal authority. The Justice Department sued California in November, contending the state cannot regulate how federal officers carry out their duties and that the law violates the Constitution's Supremacy Clause.
Earlier this month, U.S. District Judge Christina Snyder blocked California from enforcing the mask restrictions against federal officers. Her reasoning was straightforward: the law unlawfully discriminated against the federal government because it exempted certain state law enforcement agencies while applying to federal agents.
Read that again. California wrote a law that let its own officers mask up in certain situations but criminalized the same conduct by federal agents. That's not a transparency principle. That's a targeting mechanism.
Snyder did allow California to enforce a separate state requirement that law enforcement officers display visible identification showing their agency and badge number, except when working undercover. Newsom called that portion of the ruling "a clear win for the rule of law." A curious bit of spin, given that the central feature of his own law was just struck down.
The 9th Circuit's full stay now keeps Snyder's block firmly in place while the case moves through the appellate process.
First Assistant U.S. Attorney Bill Essayli put it plainly:
"The state of California needs to familiarize itself with the Supremacy Clause."
"It does not have the authority to regulate federal agents. This is another key win for the Justice Department."
This is a foundational point that California's political leadership keeps pretending doesn't exist. States do not get to dictate the operational procedures of federal law enforcement. They never have. The Supremacy Clause is not ambiguous on this question, and no amount of progressive branding changes the constitutional math.
California state Sen. Scott Wiener, the bill's author, said after the district court ruling that he would move quickly to revise the law to apply more uniformly across law enforcement agencies.
In other words, the state already conceded the discrimination problem at the heart of the statute. The fix Wiener is proposing is not a principled defense of the original law. It's an admission that the law was built on a double standard.
This was never about masks. California has spent years constructing an elaborate legal infrastructure designed to obstruct federal immigration enforcement. Every new bill, every new regulation, every new "sanctuary" policy serves the same purpose: make it harder, more dangerous, and more politically costly for the federal government to enforce the law within California's borders.
The mask ban was one more brick in that wall. By exposing the identities of federal agents conducting lawful operations, the state was effectively outsourcing intimidation to activist networks. Officers who arrest illegal immigrants in communities where that enforcement is politically unpopular become targets. Their names circulate. Their faces appear online. Their families face threats.
Bondi framed the stakes correctly:
"This crucial ruling protects our brave men and women in the field. We will not stop fighting bad laws like these in California and across the country."
The Justice Department has now won at the district level and secured a full stay from the 9th Circuit, a court not historically known for its enthusiasm for federal enforcement actions. That tells you how far outside the constitutional lines California wandered with this law.
Sacramento will keep testing boundaries. The courts will keep drawing them. But for now, the agents enforcing federal law in California can do their jobs without the state government painting targets on their backs.
Brazilian prosecutors have archived their investigation into former President Jair Bolsonaro over allegations of "genocide" during the COVID-19 pandemic, concluding that the case rested on nothing more than political grievance dressed up as a criminal complaint.
The office of the federal public prosecutor announced Thursday that the investigation, rooted in accusations that Bolsonaro's pandemic response amounted to genocide, lacked any factual basis worth pursuing. Federal Prosecutor Luciana Furtado de Moraes had requested the archive in late January, and her reasoning was blunt.
"From the analysis of the records, this ministerial body finds that there is no reason to initiate criminal prosecution due to the facts, given that the information presented is nonspecific and generic, lacking minimum documentary evidence to corroborate the complex and comprehensive allegations."
That is prosecutorial language for: there was nothing there. The complaint that launched the investigation amounted to "personal reports, subjective evaluations, political perceptions" without "individualized facts, minimum elements of materiality or concrete evidence," according to Furtado de Moraes's request.
The left wanted to criminalize a policy disagreement. Prosecutors, to their credit, declined.
According to Breitbart, the genocide accusation traces back to October 2021, when Brazilian leftist lawmakers reportedly prepared a motion to charge Bolsonaro with the crime. Their leaked complaint made the case in terms that were sweeping and conveniently unfalsifiable:
"The decision not to acquire vaccines between the months of July 2020 and at least January 2021, which lacked any technical or scientific basis, and flew in the face of recommendations from international health authorities, ended up claiming the lives of thousands of Brazilians who would undoubtedly have made use of such vaccines."
Set aside the rhetorical certainty of "undoubtedly." The complaint targeted a period when vaccines were barely available anywhere on earth, and when the primary vaccine products accessible to Brazil were Chinese-made offerings that even a top Chinese public health official admitted "don't have very high protection rates." Bolsonaro was initially skeptical of those products, then later thanked the Chinese government for providing them.
So the genocide charge boiled down to this: Bolsonaro did not move fast enough to purchase vaccines that their own manufacturers conceded were mediocre, during a window when global supply was constrained for every nation. That is not genocide. That is a policy dispute, and an increasingly common one that played out in capitals worldwide.
Bolsonaro's broader pandemic stance was well known. He:
Reasonable people can debate those positions. Charging a head of state with genocide for them is not reasonable. It is the weaponization of criminal law against political opponents, and prosecutors finally said so plainly.
The genocide investigation's collapse would be cause for straightforward vindication in any normal legal environment. Brazil is not normal. Bolsonaro remains buried under a cascade of legal actions that, taken together, paint a picture of a judicial system operating with a political mandate.
Consider the inventory. The Supreme Federal Tribunal convicted Bolsonaro on charges related to an alleged coup attempt, linking him to a riot in Brasilia on January 8, 2023. Bolsonaro was in the United States at the time. The court sentenced him to 27 years in prison, claimed he had planned to poison current President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, and banned him from running for public office until 2060. He will be 105 years old.
Shortly after that conviction, another Brazilian court found him guilty of "recreational racism" over a joke made to a Black supporter who himself stated he did not find the joke offensive. The fine: $188,750.
Then, in September, STF Justice Flávio Dino opened yet another investigation into Bolsonaro related to the pandemic, alleging potential charges of irregular use of public funds, spreading an epidemic, and "crimes against humanity." This is a separate action from the genocide case that was just shelved.
According to a CNN Brasil report, the charges archived Thursday extended well beyond genocide, encompassing allegations of "involvement with militias, drug trafficking, corruption, poisoning of authorities, political persecution, and attacks on the democratic order." It reads less like a criminal investigation and more like a keyword search for every possible accusation that could be leveled against a political figure.
What emerges from the full picture is a judicial apparatus that functions as an extension of political opposition. Bolsonaro lost the 2022 presidential election to Lula, a socialist who was himself a convicted felon before judicial intervention cleared his path to run. Since then, the legal system has pursued Bolsonaro with a breadth and intensity that makes selective prosecution look restrained by comparison.
The genocide case was the most nakedly political of the bunch, which is why its collapse matters. Prosecutors looked at the file and found nothing but rhetoric. Not thin evidence. Not a close call. Nothing. Generic accusations and subjective evaluations.
Yet for years, the charge served its purpose. "Genocide" is not a word deployed for legal precision. It is deployed for political destruction. It circulated in international media. It shaped perceptions of Bolsonaro as something beyond a conservative leader with heterodox pandemic views. It made him, in the framing of his opponents, a mass killer.
Now prosecutors have confirmed what was evident from the start: the accusation was built on air.
The shelving of the genocide case does not free Bolsonaro from legal jeopardy. He is still serving a 27-year sentence. He is still banned from office for decades. Justice Dino's pandemic investigation remains open. The machinery continues.
But the genocide charge was the crown jewel of the left's narrative, the single most dramatic accusation leveled against a leader whose real offense was governing as a conservative in a country whose institutions prefer otherwise. Its quiet burial in a prosecutor's filing cabinet that tells you everything about the strength of the case his opponents built.
They called it genocide. Prosecutors called it nothing.
