Epstein Victims Use Super Bowl Ad to Pressure Bondi Over Withheld Files

Women demand truth from Florida attorney general as DOJ disputes claims of failed transparency

Published on Feb. 9, 2026

A Super Bowl commercial created by the group World Without Exploitation featured several women who were victims of Jeffrey Epstein's sex trafficking ring, urging Florida Attorney General Pam Bondi to release more files from the Epstein cases. The commercial came after the Department of Justice announced the release of over 3 million pages of files, but Epstein's victims and some lawmakers claim the DOJ failed to fully comply with transparency laws by withholding a significant portion of the files.

Why it matters

The Epstein case has been a major political and legal controversy, with questions remaining about the extent of his crimes and the potential involvement of other powerful individuals. The victims' use of a high-profile Super Bowl ad to pressure the Florida attorney general highlights their ongoing fight for transparency and accountability.

The details

The commercial featured women holding photos of their younger selves and images of redaction marks, signaling their frustration with the DOJ heavily redacting some files while failing to redact names in others. The women said "After years of being kept apart, we're standing together. Because this girl deserves the truth." The DOJ has disputed claims that it failed to comply with transparency laws, saying its review was "very comprehensive" and that it did not hide information to protect President Trump, former President Clinton, or other wealthy and politically connected individuals associated with Epstein.

  • The Super Bowl commercial aired on Sunday, February 9, 2026.
  • Last month, the DOJ announced the release of over 3 million pages of files from the Epstein case.

The players

Pam Bondi

The Florida Attorney General who the Epstein victims are urging to release more files from the Epstein cases.

Chuck Schumer

The Senate Minority Leader who elevated the Super Bowl commercial on social media, calling it "the most important ad" of the day.

Robert Garcia

A Democratic Congressman from California who has been leading inquiries into Epstein matters in the House of Representatives.

Thomas Massie

A Republican Congressman from Kentucky who is among lawmakers planning to visit the DOJ to review undisclosed Epstein files.

Donald Trump

The former president who was once friends with Epstein but was never accused of crimes associated with him.

Bill Clinton

The former president who was once friends with Epstein but was never accused of crimes associated with him.

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What’s next

Lawmakers, including Rep. Thomas Massie, plan to visit the DOJ on Monday to review undisclosed Epstein files.

The takeaway

The Epstein victims' use of a high-profile Super Bowl commercial to pressure the Florida attorney general highlights their ongoing fight for transparency and accountability in the Epstein case, which remains a major political and legal controversy with unanswered questions about the extent of Epstein's crimes and the potential involvement of other powerful individuals.