"It’s Time For The Truth": Epstein Survivors Release Powerful Super Bowl Ad

A group of eight Jeffrey Epstein survivors broke their silence on Super Bowl Sunday, releasing a jarring 40-second video that takes direct aim at the Department of Justice. The ad, produced by the advocacy group World Without Exploitation, featured the women holding photographs of their younger selves—the age they were when they were first abused. With black redaction marks smeared across their mouths, the survivors used the most-watched television event of the year to demand full transparency from Attorney General Pam Bondi.

The survivors are calling for the release of the remaining three million pages of documents currently being withheld by the federal government. "After years of being kept apart, we’re standing together," the women declared in the video. "Because we all deserve the truth." The ad highlights a growing rift between the administration and the victims over the implementation of the Epstein Files Transparency Act, which President Trump signed into law in November 2025.

While the DOJ recently published a massive tranche of 3.5 million documents and thousands of videos, survivors and their allies say it is not enough. Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche recently framed the January 30 release as the "end of the road," claiming that remaining files must stay classified to protect victims and preserve investigations. However, survivors argue that the government is using redactions to shield powerful figures rather than protect the vulnerable.

Bipartisan Pressure In Washington

The ad aired just one day before key lawmakers, including Rep. Thomas Massie, R-Ky., and Rep. Ro Khanna, D-Calif., visited a secure DOJ reading room to review unredacted files. Following their Monday visit, Massie and Khanna announced they had identified at least six "wealthy and powerful" men whose names had been improperly hidden from the public.

  • The Redacted Names: Following pressure from the lawmakers, the DOJ unredacted several names, including former Victoria's Secret CEO Les Wexner, who was labeled as a "possible co-conspirator" in a 2019 FBI document.
  • Foreign Officials: Lawmakers revealed that one of the redacted names belonged to a high-ranking foreign government official.
  • Torture Video: Rep. Massie identified Sultan Ahmed Bin Sulayem as the sender of an email containing a disturbing "torture video" sent to Epstein, a detail that had previously been redacted.

"No More Excuses"

The World Without Exploitation ad ends with a blunt call to action: "Stand With Us. Tell Attorney General Pam Bondi: IT'S TIME FOR THE TRUTH." The group is pushing back against Deputy Attorney General Blanche’s assertion that the department has met its legal obligations. Advocates argue that the Epstein Files Transparency Act specifically bars redactions made for the sake of "embarrassment" or "political sensitivity."

Attorney General Pam Bondi is scheduled to testify before the House Judiciary Committee this Wednesday. She is expected to face intense questioning regarding the millions of withheld pages and the "mysterious redactions" flagged by Congress. For the survivors who appeared on Super Bowl Sunday, the goal remains clear: exposing every member of the global trafficking network that allowed Epstein's crimes to continue for decades.