PHOENIX — Chris Nanos has had a long career in law enforcement, but he admits he isn't used to the amount of scrutiny that has come with leading the investigation into the disappearance of ''Today'' show host Savannah Guthrie's mother.
At news conferences since 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie's apparent abduction from her Tucson-area home, the soft-spoken sheriff of Pima County, Arizona, has tried to walk the line between keeping the public informed while withholding investigation details that only the person who took her would know. He's acknowledged the approach sometimes falls short.
''I'm not used to everyone hanging onto my every word and then holding me accountable for what I say,'' Nanos told reporters on the investigation's third day.
With the case now in its second week, Nanos has also acknowledged missteps, including that he probably should have waited longer to relinquish Nancy Guthrie's home to her family after his detectives finished combing through it for evidence. Before authorities resecured the scene, journalists had walked up to the front door to photograph blood droplets that the sheriff said were Guthrie's.
And critics, including a fellow Democrat, called him out for going to a University of Arizona basketball game last weekend while the victim was still missing.
''That does not look good,'' said Dr. Matt Heinz, a Democrat who serves on the county's government board. ''I mean, dude, watch the game at home. Read the room.''
Responding to criticism, Nanos told the Green Valley News that no one can work around the clock.
''Even though I want to, I can't, and to sit back and say, ‘Well, it's a bad image,' I guess I'm going to have to live with that image. Because I got to a point where I needed to decompress a little bit and back away from my team a little bit so I'm not on them all the time,'' Nanos said.