Ex-Subway Spokesman Jared Fogle Sentenced to More Than 15 Years in Prison

Before entering his guilty plea during Thursday's hearing, U.S. District Judge Tanya Walton Pratt asked Fogle whether he understood the punishment he could face and he answered, "Yes, your honor. I do"

A judge sentenced former Subway pitchman Jared Fogle to more than 15 years in prison on Thursday for trading in child pornography and having sex with underage prostitutes.

U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Walton Pratt disregarded prosecutors' recommendation that Fogle get 12½ years behind bars, opting for a stiffer sentence of 15 years and eight months in prison and ordering him to pay a $175,000 fine. She could have sentenced him to up to 50 years in prison.

In explaining her sentence, Pratt noted how fortunate Fogle was to land his lucrative deal to be Subway's spokesman after losing a lot of weight in college.

"What a gift, to have such a professional windfall fall in your lap," she said. But Pratt 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 judge ordered Fogle into custody immediately and recommended he go to a federal prison in Colorado that has a sex offender treatment program.

Before learning his sentence, the 38-year-old father of two addressed the court, apologizing for the damage he did to his victims and family and vowing to be a better person when he gets out of prison, starting his statement with, "How do I begin, your honor?"

Fogle silently sobbed while he said he takes full responsibility for what he has done.

"At the time, I really didn't think through what I was doing," he said, NBC affiliate WTHR reports. "At the time I thought it was okay."

Fogle went on to admit he lived a life of lies and deception, saying, "Not a day will go by that I will not think about them and what I did. I want to get myself healthy and still try to help others."

Fogle also addressed his two children and wife, saying, "I absolutely devastated my wife. My son and daughter will have to live with this terrible burden of my actions."

Pratt responded with, "You gave your wife $7 million, though, so she'll be OK."

Fogle pleaded guilty to one count each of travelling to engage in illicit sexual conduct with a minor and distribution and receipt of child pornography, as per a deal he struck with prosecutors in August. The charges followed a July raid on his suburban Indianapolis home.

"I so regret that I let so many of you down," he told the court. "I want to redeem my life. I want to become a good, decent person. I want to rebuild my life."

Before Fogle addressed the court, the two sides called witnesses. Fogle's lawyers called John Bradford, a professor at the University of Ottawa in Canada, who testified by phone.

Bradford said he analyzed Fogle on Aug. 17, two days before Fogle agreed to his plea deal, and concluded Fogle suffers from hypersexuality, mild pedophilia, and alcohol abuse and dependency.

He said he took Fogle's sexual history, including his sexual interests and tested him to determine what images caused Fogle to be sexually aroused. He said Fogle also told him that he had "a fairly extensive history" of using prostitutes for sex. Under cross-examination, Bradford said Fogle admitted to paying a minimum of about $12,000 a year for sex.

"He certainly engaged in sex over a significant period of time. He engaged in that extensively when he was working for the Subway Corp."

And Bradford said Fogle told him he had engaged in sex with minors of 16 and 17 years of age and said that he had a sexual interest in teenagers.

"He started viewing pornography in college and had a fairly extensive collection of pornography in college," Bradford said.

Bradford said Fogle apparently had a compulsive eating disorder before he lost all of the weight that to him becoming the face of Subway, and that his hypersexuality seemed to develop shortly after he shed the extra pounds.

He also said Fogle, whose wife filed for divorce on the day he agreed to plead guilty, admitted that he occasionally fantasized about children. "His main interest was in young females and some interest in adolescent males."

Bradford said he concluded that Fogle suffered from "mild pedophilia."

"I did believe that he did suffer from pedophilia, but it was pedophilia that did not involve acting out that with a child."

Bradford said that Fogle told him he had fantasies about prepubescent females and had masturbated to those fantasies.

"There's no evidence I have that he actually engaged in sex" with such children.

In his plea deal, Fogle admitted that had sex at New York City hotels with two girls under age 18 — one of whom was 16 at the time — and paid them for that sex. He also acknowledged receiving child pornography produced by Russell Taylor, the former executive director of The Jared Foundation, a nonprofit Fogle started to raise awareness and money to fight childhood obesity.

Authorities said Taylor secretly filmed 12 minors as they were nude, changing clothes, or engaged in other activities using hidden cameras in his Indianapolis-area residences to produce child pornography. Taylor has agreed to plead guilty to child exploitation and child pornography charges.

Prosecutors said in a sentencing memorandum filed last week that Fogle received photos or videos from Taylor of eight of those 12 youths, and that some of those images were of girls as young as 12. Fogle could have stopped Taylor from victimizing some of minors, prosecutors have said, but he instead encouraged Taylor to produce additional child pornography.

Fogle agreed to pay a total of $1.4 million to his 14 victims, with each getting $100,000. Before Fogle entered his guilty pleas Thursday, one of his attorneys told the judge that Fogle had paid 12 of the 14 victims and turned over the checks for the last two victims before the proceedings began.

Fogle became a Subway spokesman after shedding more than 200 pounds as a college student, in part by eating the chain's sandwiches. Subway ended its relationship with Fogle after authorities raided his suburban Indianapolis home in July.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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