Eatery's ex-pitchman agrees to admit to child sex, porn

Former Subway pitchman Jared Fogle leaves the Federal Courthouse in Indianapolis on Wednesday after a hearing on child-pornography charges.
Former Subway pitchman Jared Fogle leaves the Federal Courthouse in Indianapolis on Wednesday after a hearing on child-pornography charges.

INDIANAPOLIS -- Longtime Subway pitchman Jared Fogle agreed Wednesday to plead guilty to allegations that he paid for sex acts with minors and received child pornography. He faces more than a decade in prison.

Prosecutors allege that Fogle knew the pornography had been secretly produced by the former director of his charitable foundation, which sought to raise awareness about childhood obesity and arranged for Fogle to visit schools and urge children to adopt healthy eating and exercise habits.

Authorities said Fogle offered to pay adult prostitutes finder's fees if they could connect him with minors for sex acts, including some as young as 14 or 15 years old.

"This is about using wealth, status and secrecy to illegally exploit children," U.S. Attorney Josh Minkler said.

Fogle, who will be prosecuted by information after waiving his right to formal indictment, sat in federal court with his hands clasped and quietly answered "no" when the judge asked whether he had any questions about his rights. He is expected to enter the formal plea at a later date to one count each of traveling to engage in illicit sexual conduct with a minor, and distribution and receipt of child pornography.

The agreement released by prosecutors said Fogle will pay $1.4 million in restitution to 14 minor victims, who will each receive $100,000. He also will be required to register as a sex offender and undergo treatment for sexual disorders.

The government agreed not to seek a sentence of more than 12½ years in prison, and Fogle agreed not to ask for less than five years, according to court documents.

Federal judges have wide discretion in sentencing, and Fogle could get a longer sentence. The child-porn charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison. The count involving sex with a minor is punishable by up to 30 years.

Fogle "knows that restitution can't undo the damage that he's done, but he will do all in his power to try to make it right," defense attorney Jeremy Margolis told reporters.

The married father of two, he added, has a "medical problem" and "expects to get well," but he did not elaborate.

As Fogle left the courthouse, several people jeered him from a crowd of onlookers, protesters and TV cameras.

One man shouted, "Hey, Jared, leave those kids alone." Others waved signs accusing authorities of going light on Fogle while giving many members of minority groups rougher treatment.

Fogle, 37, whose wife filed for divorce Wednesday, became Subway's pitchman after shedding more than 200 pounds, as a college student, in part by eating the chain's sandwiches. He was the public face of the company for more than 15 years -- a period in which Subway's number of locations tripled, making it the world's largest restaurant chain.

Subway suspended the partnership in July after agents raided Fogle's home in the affluent Indianapolis suburb of Zionsville, and the chain said this week that it had ended its relationship with Fogle.

Federal prosecutors allege in the documents that Fogle traveled to pay for sex acts, including with minors, from 2007 until as recently as June and that he repeatedly planned business trips to coincide with his sexual pursuits.

The court document detailing the charges against Fogle states that he paid for sex at New York City hotels with two girls under age 18 -- one of whom was 17. But the plea agreement refers to the two girls as being 16, and that one of them also had sex with Fogle after she turned 17. Federal prosecutors could not explain the discrepancy between the two documents.

The girl told Fogle her age when they first met, according to the documents.

After that meeting, Fogle texted the girl and offered to pay her a fee if she could find him another underage girl to pay for sex acts, according to documents.

During those discussions, Fogle "stated that he would accept a 16-year-old girl, while stating that the younger the girl, the better," the documents said.

Posts on social media place Fogle in New York around the dates of the reported sex acts.

Tweets from Subway's official account indicate that Fogle attended events ahead of the New York Marathon in November 2012, appearing in a segment of a news program Nov. 1 and sitting on a panel with Subway teammates the next day.

On Jan. 12, 2013, Fogle tweeted from his personal account that he would appear on the Subway Postgame Show on CBS. He later tweeted photos of himself in Times Square and in the CBS studio.

Between 2011 and 2013, Fogle also repeatedly sent text messages to escorts, "soliciting them to provide him with access to minors as young as 14 to 15 years," the documents said, adding that he would only make such requests after engaging in sex acts with the escorts to "insure that they were not undercover police officers."

The documents also alleged that Fogle, on multiple occasions, received sexually explicit images and videos produced by Russell Taylor, 43, who ran the charitable Jared Foundation.

Two months before Fogle's home was raided, authorities arrested Taylor on charges that he produced and possessed child pornography. Investigators said they discovered a cache of sexually explicit photos and videos that Taylor produced by secretly filming minor children at his home.

Prosecutors also allege that Fogle received from Taylor multiple images and videos, some of which were taken by a video camera hidden in a clock radio that filmed children changing clothes or bathing. Some were taken in buildings where Taylor lived.

The documents said Fogle knew that those depicted were minors, some as young as 13 or 14 years old and, in some cases, knew the minors involved by name and had met them "during social events in Indiana."

Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven DeBrota said investigators pored through some 159,000 text messages, 27,000 emails and 47,000 images, and are "fairly confident" that evidence does not suggest any other victims beyond the 14.

Information for this article was contributed by Tom Murphy, Brian Slodysko, Michael Tarm and Hannah Cushman of The Associated Press.

A Section on 08/20/2015

Upcoming Events