icon-show

Now Playing

The Paul Finebaum Show

FM Talk 1065

  • College Pick Em 2024
  • Hear Dr. Bill Williams' Forecast

    twice an hour on FMTalk1065

Three Big Things

1 2 3
  • Arrest made in disappearance of mother, 2 children as search intensifies in south Alabama

    By 

    Authorities announced Tuesday that an arrest has been made in the mysterious disappearance of a Theodore family, nearly two weeks after a mother and her children were last seen.


    Read More : Arrest made in disappearance of mother, 2 children as search intensifies in south Alabama - al.com

  • City to give millions to DA’s office

    After hearing an impassioned request for supplemental funding from Mobile County District Attorney Keith Blackwood last week, the Mobile City Council voted to give his agency $3.3 million to make up for a shortfall in state financial support.

    City to give millions to DA’s office | Mobile | lagniappemobile.com

  • Why it took so long for FBI to get Nest camera footage of Nancy Guthrie kidnapping suspect

    The FBI finally released the first images of Nancy Guthrie’s suspected abductor 10 days after she vanished from her Arizona home — a delay caused by two major obstacles — her security camera was missing and the 84-year-old grandmother didn’t subscribe to the camera’s back-up storage plan.

    The long-awaited release of the horrifying break-in footage recorded by the missing Nest camera shows just what parent company Google is capable of, one expert said.

    Guthrie wasn’t paying for a Google Home subscription which would have stored her Nest feed, even if the physical camera was removed. It costs $10 a month — or $100 a year — for the base service that saves video triggered by movements or “events” for 30 days.

    “It gives us some insight to what Google is capable of,” former prosecutor and current criminal defense lawyer John W. Day told The Post.

    “Even without paid subscription, there is a way to go to some data center and spend a lot of time and effort to try to find that particular camera, at that particular time without a subscription,” Day said. “You can only imagine how difficult that was if it took 10 days to get there.”

    He explained that investigators could have gotten the video from Google in one of three main ways: the feds could have gotten a search warrant from a judge to issue to Google; the family could have authorized the tech giant to conduct the search; or Google could have voluntarily opted to track it down.

    “Everyone has the same incentive, which is to find this sweet woman before too long,” Day said. “Google had every reason to cooperate. The family has got to be grateful, law enforcement has to be grateful.”

    “It’s a miraculous turn of events because this could be the thing that leads to a break in the case,” the attorney added.

    Guthrie hasn’t been seen since her son-in-law dropped her off at her home at 9:45 p.m. on Jan. 31. The investigation into her disappearance was deemed criminal on Feb. 2, after a supposed $6 ransom note was sent to news outlets. The note’s deadline lapsed without any known change to Guthrie’s status.

    The footage of a masked person tinkering with the Nest camera outside her Tucson home appeared to confirm the theory that the mom of “Today” show host Savannah Guthrie was kidnapped.

    “We believe she is still alive. Bring her home,” Savannah wrote in a social media post Tuesday.


    Read more : Why it took so long for FBI to get Nest camera footage of Savannah Guthrie's mom's suspect

M Mon Monday
T Tue Tuesday
W Wed Wednesday
T Thur Thursday
F Fri Friday
S Sat Saturday
S Sun Sunday