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		Ex-Subway pitchman blames victim's 
		parents for her 'destructive behaviors' 
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		 [September 03, 2016] 
		By Eric M. Johnson 
 (Reuters) - Former Subway sandwich pitchman 
		Jared Fogle, who is in prison for child pornography and sex with minors 
		convictions, has responded to a lawsuit filed on behalf of one of his 
		underaged female victims by blaming her parents for what he called 
		"destructive behaviors" such as drinking and drug abuse.
 
 Fogle, 38, who became famous after shedding weight on a diet that 
		included sandwiches from the fast-food chain, pleaded guilty in November 
		2015 to charges of child pornography and traveling for illicit paid sex 
		with minors.
 
 A civil lawsuit has been brought against him on behalf of the girl, and 
		in a response to it on Thursday Fogle argued that her parents should be 
		third-party defendants alongside him and that they may be liable for all 
		or part of their daughter's claims against him, court documents showed.
 
 In a motion filed in court, Fogle said the parents' "hateful and 
		abusive" relationship toward each other, alcohol abuse and a lack of 
		parental supervision caused emotional distress and depression suffered 
		by their daughter, and paved the way for several "destructive behaviors" 
		in which she engaged.
 
		
		 
		Fogle said in the complaint that her parents were liable for her 
		"harmful activities" like alcohol abuse, substance abuse, 
		self-mutilation, and sexual activity.
 An attorney for Fogle declined to comment. Attorneys for the victim said 
		"any statements will be filed in the federal court proceedings." It was 
		not immediately clear who was representing the victim's parents.
 
 The victim, who was under 18 years old at the time of the offenses, has 
		not been identified to protect her privacy. She was surreptitiously 
		videotaped by an associate of Fogle for pornography.
 
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			Jared Fogle is led from federal court in Indianapolis, Indiana 
			August 19, 2015. REUTERS/Susan Guyett/File Photo 
            
             
			She was videotaped and photographed multiple times from March 2011 
			to January 2015 by cameras concealed throughout the Indiana home of 
			Russell Taylor, the former head of Fogle's charitable foundation.
 Taylor pleaded guilty last year to a dozen counts of child sexual 
			exploitation and one count of distributing and receiving child 
			pornography.
 
 The victim sued Fogle, Taylor and his wife, in March. Her civil case 
			seeks monetary damages of $150,000 for personal injuries and mental 
			anguish.
 
 The recorded pornography became a part of the case against Fogle. 
			Fogle is serving a 15-1/2-year prison sentence, which was upheld by 
			a U.S. appeals court in Chicago in June.
 
 (Reporting by Eric M. Johnson in Seattle; Editing by Bill Rigby and 
			James Dalgleish)
 
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