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Death Lies & Alibis

🚨 SHERIFF FIRES BACK: “WE DID OUR JOB” AS NANCY GUTHRIE CASE INTENSIFIES Sheriff Responds to Criticism Over Investigation Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos is pushing back against criticism over how his department handled the investigation into the disappearance of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie. In a recent interview with the Daily Mail, Nanos addressed claims that deputies left the crime scene too early or failed to thoroughly process the property before the FBI became involved. The sheriff strongly disagreed with that narrative. According to Nanos, his officers were at Guthrie’s home for nearly 20 hours, collecting evidence and fully processing the scene before federal agents conducted their own follow-up search. He stated that his department completed its responsibilities and that the FBI later “did their thing” as part of the joint effort. Nanos also shared that his brother passed away the day after Nancy was reported missing — at the same time national media descended on Tucson to cover the case. Nancy Guthrie, the mother of TODAY show host Savannah Guthrie, was taken from her Tucson home on February 1. The FBI has since released doorbell camera footage showing a masked individual wearing gloves and carrying a backpack outside Nancy’s home. Investigators recently confirmed that DNA was recovered from a glove believed to match the one worn by the person captured on video. That DNA profile is expected to be run through the national CODIS database to determine whether it matches a known offender. The investigation remains active. #NancyGuthrie #BreakingNews #TrueCrime #BringNancyHome #FBIUpdate #ArizonaNews #ColdCaseOrNot #JusticeForNancy #CrimeScene #DeathLiesAlibis

Death Lies & Alibis

**The Michael McKee Case: Power, Possession, and Murder** This article notes that Michael David McKee was awarded a Certificate of Superior Achievement in an American History Contest, along with a Certificate of Merit for the highest score in Muskingum County. History. Essay writing. Critical thinking. Understanding power, ethics, and how people shape the world. On paper, this wasn’t just academic success—it was recognition for analysis, comprehension, and the ability to make an argument. The kind of skill set often praised as a marker of leadership and intellect. And now, reading this in the context of today, it lands differently. Because the same person once recognized for excellence in history—for understanding cause and effect, consequences, and human behavior—is now accused of creating a moment in history defined by violence and irreversible loss. This isn’t about suggesting that awards predict crimes. They don’t. But it does raise an uncomfortable point: intelligence and achievement don’t prevent obsession. Education doesn’t cancel control. And success doesn’t equal safety—for the people closest to someone. The contrast here is sharp. A young man once praised for merit and mastery… Now charged in the murders of Monique Tepe and Spencer Tepe. Sometimes what makes a case compelling isn’t just what someone did—it’s what they were capable of understanding when they did it. And that’s the part that lingers. Because this wasn’t ignorance. It wasn’t a lack of opportunity. It wasn’t someone who didn’t know better. And that distinction matters. More to come. #MichaelMcKeeCase #TheParentsSeries #TepeMurders #TrueCrimeDeepDive #BehindTheHeadlines #FamilyDynamics #AdoptionStory #SecretsAndSilence #IdentityAndTruth #EstrangedFamilies #TrueCrimeResearch #ContextMatters #UnseenHistory #DiggingDeeper #VictimCentered #JusticeFocused #DeathLiesAndAlibis #TrueCrimeCommunity #deathliesalibis

Death Lies & Alibis

**The Michael McKee Case: Power, Possession, and Murder** This article names Michael David McKee as a Commended Student in the 2005 National Merit Scholarship Program while attending Bishop Rosecrans High School. It notes that commended students ranked in the top five percent nationally—out of more than a million students—based on their qualifying test scores. On paper, it’s an impressive achievement. Academic promise. National recognition. The kind of milestone that suggests doors opening, futures forming. At the time, this was simply a success story. One of many published in local papers across the country, meant to recognize effort and potential. What makes it difficult to read now is, again, the distance between then and now The same name once printed for academic distinction is now tied to the murders of Monique and Spencer Tepe. That contrast doesn’t explain what happened—but it forces us to sit with an uncomfortable truth: people with promise, structure, and achievement do not exist in a vacuum. And accomplishments do not immunize anyone from accountability later in life. These clippings aren’t about blaming a past version of someone for the present. They’re about context. About how ordinary—and even admirable—the early chapters can look before everything fractures. Sometimes the story of a case isn’t just what happened at the end. It’s how unremarkable the beginning seemed. #MichaelMcKeeCase #TheParentsSeries #TepeMurders #TrueCrimeDeepDive #BehindTheHeadlines #FamilyDynamics #AdoptionStory #SecretsAndSilence #IdentityAndTruth #EstrangedFamilies #TrueCrimeResearch #ContextMatters #UnseenHistory #DiggingDeeper #VictimCentered #JusticeFocused #DeathLiesAndAlibis #TrueCrimeCommunity #deathliesalibis

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