Nancy Guthrie: A Blockchain Firm Says This Was a Crypto Hit

Jun 16, 11:00 AM
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There’s a list. A global list of people who’ve been kidnapped, attacked, or killed because of cryptocurrency. Home invasions. Forced transfers at gunpoint. Disposable operatives hired through encrypted apps and pointed at an address. A blockchain security firm called CertiK tracks them all — and in its 2026 report, it put Nancy Guthrie’s name on that list.

An 84-year-old grandmother from Tucson. On a crypto hit list alongside cases in France, the UK, and a Scottsdale home invasion that happened the day before Nancy disappeared.

Retired FBI Special Agent Jennifer Coffindaffer has said the wrench attack model “checks a lot of boxes.” She joins Tony and Robin to explain what a wrench attack is, why this case fits the pattern, and why the biggest question — who in this family had a crypto connection — remains unanswered.

If the theory is right, the person at Nancy’s door may have been recruited, briefed, and discarded. They may not know who sent them. They may not even know why. And local law enforcement may be looking for the wrong thing entirely.

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Disclaimer:

This publication contains commentary and opinion based on publicly available information. All individuals are presumed innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. Nothing published here should be taken as a statement of fact, health or legal advice.

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