FBI Agent Pat Sanford Breaks Down Wiretaps And Undercover “Bump” In Donna Adelson Trial
The Trial of Donna Adelson turned a sharp corner today as FBI Special Agent Pat Sanford took the stand. His testimony focused on the heart of the government’s case: the surveillance, the wiretaps, and the bold undercover operation known as the “bump.” Jurors were walked through how agents set the trap by sending an undercover operative to approach Donna Adelson in public while posing as a gang member. What happened next was no accident.
Sanford explained that the goal of the bump was to provoke reaction—and that’s exactly what it did. Within minutes of Donna being approached, the Adelson family’s phones lit up. Donna called Charlie. Charlie called Katherine Magbanua. The web of connections prosecutors allege was behind the murder of Dan Markel was suddenly buzzing with nervous communication.
The jury listened as Sanford connected the dots, pointing out how innocent-sounding calls were layered with coded language and anxiety. Donna herself seemed calm on the surface, but her immediate pivot to calling Charlie showed investigators she was anything but. Sanford told the jury this was not random chatter—it was the language of a conspiracy under pressure.
For the prosecution, Sanford’s testimony is a crucial piece of the puzzle. It shows jurors how law enforcement went beyond theory and speculation. They engineered a real-time stress test that forced the Adelsons to show their hand. Whether jurors see it as calculated conspiracy or simply a worried family, Sanford’s calm and detailed breakdown gave them a roadmap to understanding the case.