Epstein survivors released a powerful Super Bowl ad demanding the full release of the files

A group of women who say Jeffrey Epstein abused them has released a public service advert timed for Super Bowl Sunday. They urged Americans to pressure Pam Bondi to publish what they call the remaining government files linked to the case.

The 43 second spot was released by World Without Exploitation on Sunday, 8 February. It is framed as a Super Bowl advert and aims to reach one of the biggest audiences on US television. In the video, eight women hold up childhood or teenage photographs and speak to the camera. They call for “the truth” about the people who helped Epstein and the decisions that let him avoid accountability for years.

The campaign has renewed focus on how the government is releasing information. This comes after the Epstein Files Transparency Act set a legal timeline for releasing unclassified records. It also allows specific protections for victims and ongoing investigations.

It also comes as the U.S. Department of Justice points to a large release it says meets the law’s requirements. The department said it published nearly 3.5 million pages in late January, along with thousands of videos and a large set of images. It said this met the new rules. That release was described in detail in our coverage of the U.S. Justice Department releases millions of Epstein case records under new transparency law. The release pushed the controversy into a new phase because it gave the public a much wider view of the case record than earlier disclosures.

With millions of files now public and searchable, many readers have tried to understand what is available and where to find it. Here is how to access the newly released Jeffrey Epstein files as the debate continues over what has been published and what remains under seal.

Survivors and Democratic lawmakers say the government is still holding back a meaningful share of what it collected. They are pushing for more disclosure, along with stronger protections for victim privacy. Robert Garcia, the ranking Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, has said the department has not done enough. He has demanded a clearer accounting of what exists and what has not been released.

That tension has grown because of disputes over redactions. After lawyers for victims said sensitive details had been exposed, the Justice Department said it removed several thousand documents and media items from the release. It said it did so to fix redaction errors. It blamed the problem on technical or human mistakes.

In a joint statement reported by US outlets, survivors said the disclosure process has repeatedly put their identities into public view while leaving alleged enablers unnamed or hidden. They said this imbalance is re-traumatising and unjust. The statement mentioned the late Virginia Roberts Giuffre and renewed calls for the government to answer detailed questions about who knew what, and when.

Bondi is expected to face questions in Congress this week. Pressure is growing for either a fuller release, access to unredacted material for lawmakers, or an independent audit of what records exist and why they were not published.

For the women in the Super Bowl advert, the message is simple: stop treating the story as closed. Whether Congress forces more disclosure, courts tighten privacy safeguards, or the department stands by its “final production” claim, the campaign has turned a weekend of sport into another flashpoint in an eight year debate over power, secrecy and accountability.

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