"I still can't believe you only paid $100 for her."
Fogle, who was based in Indiana were the age of consent is 16, said: "It was amazing!!!!"
She responded: "What part of her ad made you think she was selling sex?"
And Fogle concluded: "U will have to read them to see."
The woman, who asked to remain anonymous, claims she showed the texts to management in 2008 but nothing was done. Business Insider reports that no record was made of her complaint.
Her attorney said: "She also specifically warned them that he should not be interacting with young people."
The revelation comes after Fogle's colleague Russell Taylor, executive director of Fogle's Jared Foundation, was accused of asking a woman if he could have sex with one of her horses.
In court papers filed in the case against Russell Taylor, a woman identified as Jane Doe claims that Taylor asked if he and another woman could come to her house and engage in a threeway with the animal.
The woman, who refused Taylor's request, claims she was asked as she boards horses at her home.
"Jane Doe stated Russell Taylor asked her if he and another adult female she identified could come to Jane Doe's residence and engage in sexual activity with a horse," the document reads.
The woman also claims that Taylor sent her a photo "that depicted a dog licking the nude genital area of an adult female".
The papers, obtained by Radar Online, give a better idea of the child pornography found in Taylor's home at the time of his arrest as well.
The United States District Court documents say Taylor "sexually exploited four children in his residence by using them to produce child pornography" and that police found "multiple video files of nude or partially nude minor children in bedrooms and a bathroom."
According to previous court documents detailing the April 29 raid on Taylor's Indianapolis home, the videos they found inside his house featured children as young as 9 years old.
Investigators wrote that many of the videos appeared to be shot in bedrooms and bathrooms at Taylor's former and current homes.
Taylor maintains he used cameras in the rooms of his home to monitor the minors.