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Papa John's Further Shuns Founder, Evicting Him From Offices

Papa John's Says Ex-Chairman Schnatter Is No Longer Spokesman

(Bloomberg) -- Papa John’s International Inc.’s board put further distance between the pizza chain and its outspoken founder for using a racial slur, blessing a raft of decisions to review all ties to John Schnatter, evict him from the headquarters, and remove him from all marketing materials.

A committee of independent directors ordered the termination of a so-called founder’s agreement that had designated Schnatter as the brand’s face and voice and is requesting he cease media appearances on behalf of the firm, the company said in a statement after a Sunday night board meeting. Though Schnatter resigned as chairman this month and no longer holds a formal management role, he remains on the board and still owns about 30 percent of the company’s shares.

Papa John's Further Shuns Founder, Evicting Him From Offices

Schnatter came under pressure after a media report that he used a racial slur and graphic descriptions of violence against minorities in a conversation with the company’s former media agency, Laundry Service. That was just months after he exited the chief executive officer job over critical comments about the National Football League’s national-anthem controversy.

Schnatter, 56, has acknowledged using the slur, while saying it was in the context of a training exercise.

The committee also told the company to terminate a sublease granting Schnatter the right to use office space at the headquarters in Louisville, Kentucky, according to the statement.

The board accepted Schnatter’s resignation as chairman July 11 and will appoint a new chairman in coming weeks. CEO Steve Ritchie had announced on Friday that Schnatter would “no longer be in any of the advertising or marketing materials associated with the brand.”

Shares of Papa John’s have dropped about 4.6 percent this year through July 13, leaving it with a stock-market valuation of about $1.7 billion.

Papa John’s is struggling to revive its business as Domino’s Pizza Inc. and a resurgent Pizza Hut eat into its market share. In the first quarter, Papa John’s same-store sales in North America dropped 5.3 percent. The chain has said it’s trying to appeal to more cash-strapped customers by pushing discounted fare. Meanwhile, Pizza Hut has taken over as an official NFL sponsor.

To contact the reporters on this story: Leslie Patton in Chicago at lpatton5@bloomberg.net;Craig Giammona in New York at cgiammona@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Anne Riley Moffat at ariley17@bloomberg.net, Kevin Miller, Subramaniam Sharma

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