Nancy Guthrie Case Outrage: The $188,000 Scandal Explained
Since Nancy Guthrie was kidnapped, there has been discussion about the more than $1.2 million in total rewards that have been offered for information leading to her recovery. However, most of the discussion around the case has had nothing to do with money, as observers have followed news of each new lead that has surfaced. Recently, that has changed as a $188,000 scandal is now tied to Savannah Guthrie's missing mother's case.
The $188,000 Polymarket Betting on Nancy Guthrie's Case Explained
The Daily Mail has reported on a Polymarket betting market where users gambled on whether an arrest would be made in the Nancy Guthrie kidnapping case by February 28. Ultimately, people wagered more than $188,000 on whether someone would be arrested by that date.
A Be (In) Crypto article noted that the betting on the Guthrie case began on February 10, just over a week after she was first reported missing, on February 1. The outlet also revealed that as of February 11, traders were assigning 76% odds of an arrest happening by the time betting closed. Polymarket's X account also initially shared updates on the market. On February 12, Polymarket responded to a post about TMZ getting a ransom letter, stating that the odds of an arrest were 49% at that time, according to its users.
49% chance the kidnapper is caught this month. https://t.co/Q5dtarqdR0
— Polymarket (@Polymarket) February 12, 2026
Ultimately, the market was closed before February 28, and its page on Polymarket was changed to now read, "This event has been archived."
The Reaction to the Nancy Guthrie Betting Market Explained
The Daily Mail's coverage of the canceled Nancy Guthrie case betting market quoted Red Banyan, the founder and CEO of a crisis PR firm, who expressed outrage. "Betting about the outcome of an elderly woman's kidnapping is stomach-turning and insensitive. Even if you think prediction markets are useful in other contexts, for most people this instantly crosses a bright red line." Additionally, a handful of YouTube videos expressed disbelief at the story.
However, as of the time of publication, media outlet descriptions of widespread disgust and outrage at the scandal are overstated. In reality, the controversy has largely flown under the radar, as is evidenced by the limited social media discourse. In fact, there appear to be more posts focused on frustration with or confusion about the betting market being closed than reactions to its creation.