Epstein Survivors Call Out Pam Bondi, DOJ in Ad Ahead of Super Bowl
Epstein survivors said Pam Bondi should release the rest of the Epstein files in a pre-Super Bowl ad

As fans prepare to watch Super Bowl LX between the New England Patriots and Seattle Seahawks, Epstein survivors have released a striking advertisement calling on Attorney General Pam Bondi and the Department of Justice to release remaining files related to the convicted sex offender.
The 40-second advertisement features survivors standing together, reminding viewers that the Epstein Files Transparency Act was signed into law on 19 November 2025, yet three million files remain unreleased by the DOJ. 'After years of being kept apart, we're standing together, because this girl deserves the truth, because she deserves the truth, because they all deserve the truth', the survivors say one by one, eventually holding up photos of themselves when they were trafficked by Jeffrey Epstein. The video ends with a direct appeal: 'Tell Attorney General Pam Bondi, it's time for the truth'.
🚨 Epstein survivors release this powerful PSA in advance of the Super Bowl demanding answers from the Justice Department. This is the Super Bowl ad every American should see. Spread it everywhere. pic.twitter.com/UGXGNfMXh2
— Aaron Parnas (@AaronParnas) February 8, 2026
Frustration With DOJ Over Privacy Violations
The advertisement reflects mounting frustration amongst survivors over the files the DOJ has released thus far. Some of their identities appeared unredacted despite the law requiring victims' identities be protected. Danielle Bensky discovered that what she believed were confidential conversations with the FBI were included in the latest batch of documents.
Lawyers representing the survivors say the women were assured 'privacy violations' wouldn't recur after happening twice before. 'That expectation was shattered on 30 January 2026, when DOJ committed the single most egregious violation of victim privacy in one day in United States history', said attorneys Brittany Henderson and Brad Edwards in a letter to judges overseeing the file releases.
Bensky, who was a teenager when she says Epstein abused her 20 years ago, doesn't believe the DOJ's mistakes were accidental. 'I thought it was carelessness, and then I went to incompetence', she told NBC News. 'And now it feels, it feels a bit deliberate. It feels like a bit of an attack on survivors'.
Another Ad Projects Most-Mentioned Names
A separate purported advertisement momentarily projected onto a Las Vegas building touted itself as 'Paedo Bowl', ranking individuals whose names appeared most frequently in the files. The video listed President Donald Trump with 5,300 mentions, Microsoft founder Bill Gates with 2,592 mentions, Steve Bannon with 2,901 mentions, Elon Musk with 1,465 mentions, former US President Bill Clinton with 1,210 mentions, and others, including disgraced royal Prince Andrew, Palantir founder Peter Thiel, and Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick.
BREAKING: As the Super Bowl gets ready to kick off in Las Vegas, someone just protected this video onto a building there!
— Brian Krassenstein (@krassenstein) February 7, 2026
It’s the “P-do Bowl” featuring the men who are in the Epstein files the most.
Hint: Donald Trump, Howard Lutnick and Steve Bannon are the all-stars of this… pic.twitter.com/ePQSUCJpKK
Online reactions expressed shock at the projection's boldness. 'With this level of security, and yet someone still managed to release this video, Las Vegas is bound to be anything but peaceful tonight. I think this might be the most dangerous commercial in Super Bowl history', said one user.
Another commenter noted: 'Talk about dark humour. Doing it right now on the Strip is savage, but maybe that's how you keep the spotlight on the victims...loud and unignorable'.
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