Dayton Daily News

Ex-restaurant owner fighting deportatio­n order

- By Mark Fisher Staff Writer

A U.S. immigratio­n DAYTON — judge has ordered the deportatio­n of former Dayton restaurant owner Eva Christian, although Christian has filed an appeal to that order while she remains in custody in the Butler County Jail.

“Eva Christian, an unlawfully present citizen of Germany, was issued a final order of removal by a federal immigratio­n judge” on Dec. 1, Shawn Neudauer, spokesman for the U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t agency, told the Dayton Daily News.

“Her appeal of that decision remains pending with the Board of Immigratio­n Appeals,” Neudauer said.

The immigratio­n court system operates differentl­y from other federal courts, with more limited public access to court filings and proceeding­s. A separate federal lawsuit that Christian filed in U.S. District Court in an attempt to be freed from the Butler County Jail because of a medical condition was rejected by a magistrate judge earlier this month.

Although she has lived in the U.S. for decades, Christian, formerly of Washington Twp., is not an American citizen. She was born in Croatia and raised in Germany, and has German citizenshi­p. She faces deportatio­n now because she was convicted of multiple felony counts related to insurance fraud and served an eightyear sentence in the Ohio prison system, completing that sentence in September 2020. Those with a Green Card and permanent resident status can have that status revoked for serious criminal activity and conviction­s. Christian founded and owned the now-defunct Cafe Boulevard (later Boulevard Haus) for nearly 15 years in Dayton’s Oregon District, in space that now houses Lily’s Dayton. She also founded a second restaurant, Cena Brazilian Steakhouse, which was located in front of the Dayton Mall in Miami Twp. She was convicted in May 2012 of five criminal counts after mastermind­ing a scheme to hire others in 2009 to set her Dayton Mall restaurant on fire, and later trying to set it on fire herself; and also of staging a break-in at her Washington Twp. residence, all in order to collect insurance money.

In her request to be released from jail — filed last fall by Dayton attorney Karen Denise Bradley on Christian’s behalf — Christian, 52, said she had been diagnosed with chronic asthma and had been treated for the condition since 2014. She said her confinemen­t in the Butler County Jail increases her likelihood of contractin­g COVID-19, which, due to her asthma, could lead to “severe injury or death,” Bradley wrote in her petition to U.S. District Court. Her incarcerat­ion and increased risk of disease and death means that her Fifth Amendment rights of due process are being violated, and she should be released immediatel­y, according to Christian and her attorney.

But in a decision handed down March 12, U.S. Magistrate Judge Michael R. Merz rejected the request, ruling that Christian “has not establishe­d that she has an enhanced risk of death of severe illness from COVID19.”

“While she pleads that she has severe asthma,” Merz wrote, there was no evidence submitted to support the claim. In addition, Merz said in his ruling, Christian “has not establishe­d that being confined in the Butler County Jail has significan­tly increased her risk of contractin­g the disease.”

Messages left late last week with Bradley, who represente­d Christian in the motion to be released from jail, were not returned as of Monday morning, March 29.

 ??  ?? Eva Christian finished an eight-year prison term for insurance fraud in September of last year.
Eva Christian finished an eight-year prison term for insurance fraud in September of last year.

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