Survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein used one of the most-watched television events in the United States — Super Bowl Sunday — to deliver a powerful and emotional call for truth, accountability, and justice. In a nationally aired advertisement, the women urged the US government to release all remaining documents linked to Epstein’s sex-trafficking case.
The advertisement, released by the advocacy group World Without Exploitation, features Epstein’s survivors speaking directly to the public, calling for long-overdue transparency in what they describe as one of the most extensive sex-trafficking scandals in modern history.
In the film, the women appeal to viewers to stand with them and demand action from US Attorney General Pam Bondi. Citing the Epstein Files Transparency Act, the survivors insist that all unreleased records related to Epstein’s crimes must be made public, without delay.
Speaking one by one, the survivors address the camera before their voices merge into a collective message: “After years of being kept apart, we’re standing together — because this girl deserves the truth.”
The advertisement includes photographs of the women from their childhood and teenage years, which they say mark the period when Epstein first exploited them. Through these images, the survivors emphasize the lasting impact of the abuse and renew demands for the disclosure of information about others who may have enabled or participated in Epstein’s crimes.
As the commercial concludes, a stark message fills the screen: “Stand With Us. Tell Attorney General Pam Bondi: THE TRUTH IS OVERDUE.”
The decision to air the message during the Super Bowl — the National Football League’s championship game and one of the most watched broadcasts in the country — reflects a strategic effort by survivors to maintain public pressure on the US Department of Justice.
World Without Exploitation also released an extended version of the advertisement online, describing it as “the Super Bowl ad every American should see.”
Democratic Congressman Robert Garcia amplified the message ahead of its broadcast, posting on Social Media: “Epstein’s survivors want you to see this on Super Bowl Sunday. It’s the most important ad of the day. You don’t ‘move on’ from the world’s biggest sex-trafficking operation — you expose it.”
The campaign follows a significant document release by the Department of Justice on January 30. Acting under the Epstein Files Transparency Act — legislation signed into law by US President Donald Trump — the DOJ made approximately three million pages of records, along with 2,000 videos and 180,000 photographs, publicly available.
Despite the scale of the disclosure, survivors and advocacy groups argue that the release remains incomplete. According to the Justice Department, only about half of the roughly six million records reviewed were included, with the remaining files withheld due to their inclusion of child sexual abuse material, victim-identifying information, or documents protected under law.
The Super Bowl advertisement aired just one day before members of the US congress were scheduled to review unredacted Epstein-related files for the first time, further intensifying public scrutiny of the case.
Understanding the Epstein Files
Jeffrey Epstein’s criminal history spans nearly two decades. The original investigation began in 2005 after the parents of a 14-year-old girl reported that their daughter had been sexually assaulted at Epstein’s Palm Beach, Florida residence.
Subsequent police investigations identified at least 35 underage girls who said Epstein paid them between $200 and $300 for sexually explicit “massages.” Despite substantial evidence involving multiple minors, Epstein pleaded guilty in 2008 to soliciting prostitution from a minor and served a controversial 13-month sentence, much of it under work-release privileges.
In 2019, Epstein was arrested again on federal sex-trafficking charges. He died in a New York jail one month later in what authorities ruled a suicide, before the case could proceed to trial.
His longtime associate, Ghislaine Maxwell, was convicted in 2022 on charges related to recruiting and grooming minors for Epstein and is currently serving a 20-year prison sentence.
An Associated Press analysis of internal Justice Department records found extensive evidence of Epstein’s abuse of minors but stated investigators did not establish proof that he operated a trafficking network for powerful men. Nonetheless, recently unsealed documents have reignited allegations involving several high-profile figures, intensifying calls for full transparency.
For Epstein’s survivors, the Super Bowl advertisement is not merely symbolic. It represents an ongoing fight to ensure that the full truth is made public — and that accountability does not end with one man.
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