Law enforcement officials in Arizona searching for Nancy Guthrie now have surveillance footage from a Circle K store that might have captured a “vehicle of interest” in the mystifying case, according to a report.

The car was supposedly at or near the convenience store in Tucson, according to NBC News.

Law enforcement visited their Oracle Road location Friday after “receiving a tip regarding a vehicle of interest,” a spokesperson for Circle K told the outlet.

“Our team has provided them access to the store’s surveillance video,” the spokesperson added.

A Circle K employee confirmed to The Post that investigators showed up on Friday at the gas station, which is just half a mile away from the home of Nancy’s daughter Anne and her husband Tommaso Cioni.

Cioni was the last person to see Nancy Guthrie, dropping her off at her home after dinner at their house on Saturday Jan. 31 at 9:48 p.m. — hours before her pacemaker app disconnected from her phone at 2:28 a.m.

The Circle K location is roughly seven miles — a fifteen-minute drive — from Nancy Guthrie’s Catalina Foothills home.

Officials have not elaborated on any definitive connection the vehicle has to any part of the crime.

The Pima County Sheriff’s office said on Saturday that there are still no suspects or persons of interest in the bewildering case.

Officials also stated that they will not be confirming or releasing additional details about evidence collected during the investigation, which is being analyzed.

“It is standard practice to seek any video available from nearby residences or businesses, that is part of the ongoing investigation,” the statement said.

The department also reiterated that they would not hold any more press conferences unless there was a break in the case.

Neighbors of Guthrie reported seeing a suspicious white van parked on their street in the days leading up to her disappearance.

“It was somewhere on that street. It was a white van, full-sized, with no printing on the sides. It was parked on the street,” neighbor Brett McIntire told The Post.

McIntire could not recall the exact day that he saw the mysterious white van.

Pima County police towed an SUV believed to belong to Guthrie on Friday.

Over ten police cars converged on her home in the late afternoon, taking a vehicle from near Guthrie’s home and removing a wired device from the roof of the house.

The wired device was scooped up after a tip from a neighbor, according to Fox News.

Officials did not reveal what device they found on the roof, according to that report.