A coalition of survivors of convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein’s abuses took an unusual platform on Super Bowl Sunday to demand more transparency from the U.S. Department of Justice. In a tightly edited ad tied to one of the year’s biggest television events, the women urged Attorney General Pam Bondi to make every remaining government record on Epstein public.

>100 SECRET PHOTOS FROM JEFFREY EPSTEIN’S FILES – SLIDESHOW

In the 40-second video, produced with the advocacy group World Without Exploitation, eight survivors appear on camera with black marks over their mouths, echoing the heavy redactions that have marked the Justice Department’s releases of Epstein-related files. The survivors hold childhood photos from the period they say they were abused.

“After years of being kept apart, we’re standing together,” they say in unison. “Because we all deserve the truth.” The commercial ends with the message: “Stand with us. Tell Attorney General Pam Bondi it’s time for the truth.”

Organizers positioned the ad to reach the largest possible audience. A representative for World Without Exploitation acknowledged that the group could not afford a paid Super Bowl spot but released the powerful clip online in the same time window.

The call for transparency comes after the Justice Department released roughly 3.5 million pages of documents under the Epstein Files Transparency Act, a law passed by Congress in November requiring full disclosure of unclassified materials related to Epstein’s criminal network. But the partial release falls far short of the estimated six million pages federal officials say they reviewed, and massive redactions have left critics unsatisfied.

In defense of the releases, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche said at a White House briefing that the published files were all the department could safely make publicly available without compromising ongoing investigations or exposing victims’ identities.

The survivors’ push found support from Republican and Democratic lawmakers alike.

Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer amplified the message online, calling the video “the most important ad you will see on Super Bowl Sunday” and urging viewers to “#StandWithSurvivors.”

The Justice Department says its review of Epstein files stretched back decades and involved complex technical challenges, including redaction errors that forced it to remove thousands of files after they were found to contain unredacted personal information.

The stakes of this debate extend beyond redactions and procedure. Critics contend that the withheld documents could contain key information about Epstein’s associates — including high-profile figures — and that incomplete releases undermine public trust.

Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Maryland), who has reviewed some of the material in a secure DOJ reading room, has said inconsistencies in redactions raise concerns about whether powerful individuals are being shielded.