Nancy Guthrie: What a $2 Billion Cyber Firm Found About Her Neighborhood
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CertiK is backed by Tiger Global and Coinbase. They classified Nancy Guthrie’s alleged abduction as a wrench attack by proxy and referenced a six-million-dollar Bitcoin ransom demand. Their report used the phrase proxy target selection — language that implies the attackers may not have found the person they were looking for.
Nancy Guthrie is eighty-four. She has no known crypto holdings. She lives in Catalina Foothills, a neighborhood where the houses and the people inside them are worth targeting. The question this conversation puts on the table: did whoever showed up at Nancy’s door have the wrong address? And if they did — who in that neighborhood was the intended mark?
Three searches near the Mexican border. Twenty-five unmarked graves. None connected to Nancy. Retired law enforcement officials pointing to the Tohono O’odham reservation as a plausible route south. This case is not what most people think it is. Jennifer Coffindaffer, contributor to Hidden Killers, walks through what CertiK’s classification actually means for the investigation.
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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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