Fogle receives 15-year sentence in porn, sex case
INDIANAPOLIS — Jared Fogle emerged from obscurity to become the unlikely face of one of the nation’s biggest restaurant chains, earning a small fortune by touting the benefits of a healthy lifestyle that included Subway sandwiches.
But his wholesome public image was only that, and on Thursday he was sentenced to more than 15 years in prison for trading in child pornography and having sex with underage prostitutes.
Fogle, 38, sought leniency, apologizing to his victims and telling the court in a tearful statement that he was raised with good values by a good family but succumbed to self-centered “deception and lies.” He said he wished he had realized long ago that he had a problem.
“I had become dependent on alcohol, pornography and prostitutes,” he told the judge. “... I want to redeem my life. I want to become a good, decent person. I want to rebuild my life.”
Judge Tanya Walton Pratt wasn’t swayed, though, and gave him a harsher sentence than the 12½ years that prosecutors had sought. She also ordered him to submit to a lifetime of post-prison supervision and fined him $175,000.
“What a gift, to have such a professional windfall fall in your lap,” Pratt said, referring to the lucrative deal Subway gave Fogle after he lost more than 200 pounds in college, partly by eating its sandwiches. But she said Fogle blew the chance he’d been given by living a double life and pointed out that the crimes he committed weren’t victimless.
“The level of perversion and lawlessness exhibited by Mr. Fogle is extreme,” said Pratt.
She recommended Fogle receive sex offender treatment in prison and said she’ll recommend he serve his time at a federal lockup in Littleton, Colo., that specializes in such treatment.
Fogle pleaded guilty to one count each of traveling to engage in illicit sexual conduct with a minor and distribution and receipt of child pornography, per a deal he struck with prosecutors in August, a month after authorities raided his suburban Indianapolis home.
Fogle’s lawyers did not respond to a question about whether Fogle will appeal his sentence.