Former Subway spokesman Jared Fogle's text messages were subpoenaed by the FBI this week after a former girlfriend claimed he bragged about having "amazing sex" with a teenage girl. 

According to Business Insider, the woman, who wishes to stay anonymous claimed she met Fogle while she was a Subway franchisee in 2008. The two developed a relationship, but things took a turn for the worst when he asked her several times she can go on Craigslist to have sex with men for $500 while he watched. In several texts connected to Fogle's name, the FBI says hundreds of text acquired from January 2008 to June 2008. He also asked the woman if they can have sex with her cousin, who was underaged at the time.

The age of consent is 16 in Indiana, where Fogle resides.

Here are some of the texts, via Business Insider:

Woman: "Is this the same website you found that 16 year old girl you that you f*****? ...I still can't believe you only paid $100 for her."

Fogle: "It was amazing!!!!"

Woman: "What part of her made you think she was selling sex?"

Fogle: "U will have to read them to see."

The woman claims she presented the texts with her attorney and two levels of management at Subway and even requested for his images to be banned from her store. No action was taken because Fogle isn't an employee of the company, but has done work as a marketing partner. No records of their meeting were found and Subway stated they had no recollection of the meeting.

A journalist who previously interviewed Fogle about his charity says that she was also told lewd comments by Fogle like "'middle school girls are hot.'"

"They weren't jokes. They were very serious," she said.

Fogle hasn't been charged in the ongoing case. His home was raided after Russell Taylor, the former executive director of The Fogle Foundation, was jailed on child-pornography charges.

In a strange turn of events, many people have decided to boycott Subway not because of Fogle's accusations, but for suspending their relationship with him. Fans took to the company's Facebook page to blast them for cutting ties before he faced trial.

The company's chief marketing officer says Fogle--who is worth $15 million-- is responsible for one-third to half of the company's growth in the past 15 years.

Source: Business Insider | Photo Credit: Splash News