A physician and a real estate broker teamed up to acquire a golf course in a luxury enclave of Las Vegas.
Eli Segall

Eli Segall joined the Review-Journal in 2016, covering real estate until 2023 when he joined the paper's investigations team. He rejoined the RJ's Business desk in 2025 to cover commercial real estate and other topics. Before the RJ, he covered real estate for four years at the Las Vegas Sun. Segall has also worked for the Silicon Valley/San Jose Business Journal, The Associated Press and other news groups. He has a bachelor’s in political science from the University of Michigan and a master’s in journalism from the University of Maryland. He has earned awards from the Nevada Press Association, Best of the West, New York State Society of CPAs, National Association of Real Estate Editors and others.
Two law firms want to shoot down subpoenas, arguing the demand for records is a “fishing expedition” that seems designed to “harass.”
The luxury housing community blasted out of the McCullough Range mountains has rolled out its last batch of homesites.
Ashley Furniture’s sprawling new location in the southwest valley recently opened for business.
Across the U.S., the spring homebuying season is “lackluster” amid record-high costs and economy instability.
The ruling came more than four years after the late Zappos chief’s attorney filed a creditor’s claim in his probate case.
The Las Vegas City Council agreed to reschedule its vote on plans to turn a golf course into a sprawling new community.
A group of investors acquired a big tract of real estate along Las Vegas Boulevard.
Steve Hill, head of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority, earned a salary of roughly $447,600 in 2022.
United Rentals laid off 119 people in Las Vegas, effective Jan. 6, according to the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilitation.
The late tech mogul’s estate did not say how many of his downtown parcels will be sold.
After his trade from the Golden Knights, Max Pacioretty is trying to sell his Las Vegas mansion for nearly $12 million — almost double what he paid for it last year.
Lennar Corp. recently held a ceremonial groundbreaking for a 25-unit townhouse complex called Aqua.
Station’s parent company announced this summer it would tear down Texas Station, Fiesta Rancho and Fiesta Henderson and sell the sites.
The seven-story, 184-unit project behind The Martin condo tower is set to finish in 2024.