The survivors of the sexual abuse committed by late convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein released an advertisement on Super Bowl Sunday (February 8), sending a message that they won’t “move on” from the scandal.
“After years of being kept apart we’re standing together,” the women said in the video.
The video included messages that stated, “on November 19, 2025, the Epstein Files Transparency Act was signed into law,” which then had the “Transparency” censored, and “3 million files still have not been released” with censoring over “have” and “been.” The advertisement shows the women holding photos of themselves at the ages of the abuse while stating, “because this girl deserves the truth” and concludes with the message, “stand with us” and “tell Attorney General Pam Bondi it’s time for the truth.”
The message comes days after President Donald Trump, who the New York Times reported was mentioned more than 38,000 times across more than 5,300 files, told reporters in the Oval Office, “I think it’s really time for the country to get on to something else.” The files were believed to be released completely by the Department of Justice on December 15, 2025, however, only partial releases of redacted files were released initially and at various times before a major, yet incomplete release on January 30.
Congress will be able to view un-redacted versions of the publicly released Epstein files beginning on Monday (February 9), according to a letter sent to lawmakers from a Justice Department official, which was obtained by MS NOW on Friday (February 6).
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