Local NewsNational

Actions

Report: Papa John's Schnatter used N-word in May conference call

Posted
and last updated

UPDATE: Amid another controversy involving Papa John’s chair John Schnatter, the company announced late Wednesday that Schnatter will resign as the company's chair after revelations surfaced earlier on Wednesday that he used the N-word during a May conference call. 

For more, click here

Original story:

INDIANAPOLIS -- Former Papa John's CEO John Schnatter used the N-word on a conference call in May, according to Forbes. 

Schnatter was on a call with Papa John's executives and a marketing agency called Laundry Service as a role-playing exercise to prevent more issues with public relations when he allegedly said the N-word. Schnatter stepped down as CEO of Papa John's last yearafter he publicly criticized the NFL leadership over protests during the national anthem by football players. 

During the conference call, Schnatter downplayed his previous statements, allegedly saying “Colonel Sanders called blacks n*****s,” claiming Sanders never faced a public backlash, Forbes reported Wednesday.

Schnatter also discussed his Indiana upbringing in the conference call. He said people in Indiana used to "drag African-Americans from trucks until they died," Forbes reports. Multiple people on the conference call found his remarks offensive, and the owner of Laundry Service moved to terminate the company's relationship with Papa John's.

Laundry Service declined to comment to Forbes, and Papa John's did not dispute the account in a statement, which read: 

“Papa John’s condemns racism and any insensitive language, no matter the situation or setting. ... We take great pride in the diversity of the Papa John’s family, though diversity and inclusion is an area we will continue to strive to do better.” 

Schnatter founded Papa John's in 1984 in Jeffersonville, Indiana.