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Eli Segall

Eli Segall
Reporter: Investigations

Eli Segall joined the Review-Journal’s investigations team in 2023 after covering real estate for the paper since 2016. Before the RJ, he covered real estate and other business topics 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
 
Summerlin-area land sold to health care company for $19M

Intermountain Healthcare, a nonprofit system with more than 20 hospitals, spent almost $19 million to purchase roughly 7.7 acres at the southeast corner of Rampart Boulevard and Alta Drive, near Summerlin.

Boyd Gaming to build a new Las Vegas headquarters

Boyd Gaming’s new Las Vegas headquarters would be just a mile or so west of its current primary office building. Other casino operators, including MGM Resorts International and Caesars Entertainment Corp., also have office buildings in town, but locally, resort companies are known for housing most of their staff in the hotels, not in office parks.

Invitation Homes names new CEO of company

As head of the company, Dallas Tanner will earn an annual base salary of $700,000, and his target bonus this year will be 150 percent of his annual base pay, according to a securities filing .

Henderson retail center to become medical office complex

The Nigro family of developers teamed with brokerage firm IREPLV to purchase four buildings at Coronado Canyons, at the southeast corner of Green Valley and Horizon Ridge parkways, for $12.25 million. The sale closed in September.

‘Sovereign citizen’ Thomas Benson indicted, ordered to prison

District Judge Ronald Israel this week revoked Benson’s probation, after finding that he violated it, and imposed what had been a suspended sentence of two to five years in state prison, with 173 days credit for time served, court records show.