
Moms' volunteer group from Mexico joins search for Nancy Guthrie
Newsy
Investigators are continuing to follow up on leads in the neighborhood where Nancy Guthrie was last seen, as volunteer groups also join the search effort three weeks after she went missing.
Investigators are continuing to follow up on leads in the neighborhood where Nancy Guthrie was last seen, as volunteer groups also join the search effort three weeks after she went missing.
The Pima County Sheriff's Department placed barricades on Saturday at the request of the Catalina Foothills Estates Neighborhood Association. Officials said the barricades are temporary but were put in place to reduce traffic and congestion in the area surrounding Guthrie's home.
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Long lines of cars have filled the streets there. Some of those vehicles belong to members of the media, but others are people who have traveled from as far as Dallas and Phoenix, telling the Scripps News Group station in Tucson they did so just because they love crime. Pima County Administrator Jan Lesher said the barricades are temporary but will remain in place as long as necessary.
Despite the barricades, people continue to pass through the neighborhood — including members of a volunteer search group based in Mexico, called Madres Buscadoras de Sonora, which translates to Moms Looking from Sonora. The group is made up of mothers who lost their children and still do not know what happened to them years later.













