United Cajun Navy Presses Arizona Sheriff To Approve Nancy Guthrie Search
Volunteers from the United Cajun Navy are pressing an Arizona sheriff to approve a search for missing woman Nancy Guthrie. Organizers say prompt access could aid efforts to find Guthrie, and they point to community resources and volunteers ready to help. A petition demanding that the sheriff grant the group's request has circulated online and intensified public pressure. The sheriff has not immediately approved the United Cajun Navy's access, and officials have said they are reviewing safety and legal concerns.
The United Cajun Navy began as a volunteer rescue effort after Hurricane Katrina and has since assisted in searches and disaster relief across the country. On social media, supporters posted pleas for quicker action while others cautioned about liability and the need to coordinate with law enforcement. So far mainstream reporting has emphasized the petition and local debate, and there is no obvious shift away from those initial frames.
đ Key Facts
- United Cajun Navy submitted a 41-page search plan to the Pima County Sheriff's Department shortly after Nancy Guthrie's Feb. 1, 2026 suspected abduction.
- Incident commander Josh Gill says the group has not heard back and is offering to revise the plan to satisfy law-enforcement requirements.
- An independent journalist has launched a petition urging Sheriff Chris Nanos to grant the group permission to conduct the coordinated search under his command.
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