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Eli Segall

Eli Segall
Reporter: Business

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.

The Latest
Las Vegas luxury apartment complex sells for $62M

The deal amounts to more than $281,800 per unit, more than double the market average as tracked by Colliers International. The price-per-door might also be a record for local garden-style apartments, said listing broker Taylor Sims of Cushman Wakefield.

Howard Hughes Corp. CEO Weinreb talks Summerlin real estate

After the baseball team’s new name and logo were unveiled Saturday, Howard Hughes CEO David Weinreb spoke with the Las Vegas Review-Journal about real estate in Summerlin , Las Vegas’ largest master-planned community at 22,500 acres.

Primm’s Fashion Outlets of Las Vegas faces grim future

What do you do with a failing mall like Primm’s? Someone could buy it and try to fill it with retailers, gut it for another use entirely or, in true Vegas style, implode it to build something else. For now, the mall will likely keep limping along.

Las Vegas home prices ’fairly flat’ the past few months

A total of 7,003 single-family houses were listed without offers at the end of November, up 1.2 percent from October and 54.3 percent from November 2017, according to a new report from the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors.

Ex-Las Vegas executive convicted of $1.5B Ponzi scheme

Edwin Fujinaga, former chief executive of MRI International, was convicted Tuesday of eight counts of mail fraud, nine counts of wire fraud and three counts of money laundering, according to an announcement from federal prosecutors in Nevada.

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