Obituary | Who Was Jeff German? Age, Biography, Wife and Children

An investigative journalist from Las Vegas was found stabbed to death in front of her house.

An Acclaimed Report on Sin City –

Local media and police reports state that Jeff German, a journalist for the Journal, was found fatally stabbed in the street outside his home on Saturday morning.

According to the Review-Journal, police responded to a 911 call at 10:30 a.m. Saturday and discovered German, 69, dead outside his home from apparent stab wounds. Authorities speculated that German had been involved in an altercation prior to the stabbing, but the incident itself seemed to be an outlier.

Police were looking for a suspect on Sunday.

After Jeff’s passing, “the Review-Journal family is devastated,” executive editor Glenn Cook said. In the media industry, he stood as the benchmark. Without his many years of shedding light on the shadows, it’s hard to imagine what Las Vegas would be like today.
According to his biography, German was a reporter and columnist for the Las Vegas Sun for many years, where he wrote about the courts, politics, labor, government, and organized crime. After joining the Review-Journal in 2010, his investigative work covered a wide range of topics, including organized crime, political corruption, and government failures.

In addition to writing and hosting the second season of the Review-true-crime Journal’s podcast “Mobbed Up: the Fight for Vegas,” he authored a book about organized crime in 2001 titled “Murder in Sin City: The Death of a Las Vegas Casino Boss.”

Many of German’s former coworkers have taken to social media to reflect on his time in the news business.

The paper’s assistant managing editor for investigations and engagement, Rhonda Prast, expressed her sadness over the loss of her “gifted friend and colleague” on Twitter. “It has been a pleasure to work with you on the I-team for the past three years. What a terrible blow to me and to #LasVegas.

Who Was Jef German?  Biography

Jeff German, an investigative reporter for the Journal and one of Nevada’s most seasoned and respected journalists

Over the course of his more than three decades in the Las Vegas media, German broke numerous major stories, including those involving political scandals, government corruption, and the October 1 mass shooting.

Jeff German Wife

Jeff’s relationship status is unknown. It is unknown if he is single or in a relationship. However, we will soon have all the latest information on Jeff German’s family, relationships, and more.

The Las Vegas police department stressed the importance of the homicide investigation on Sunday morning.

“On Saturday, LVMPD implemented its major case protocol in the homicide investigation,” the agency said.

In order to expeditiously apprehend the criminal, this “brings together a variety of resources to maximize the investigative effort.”

According to Metropolitan Police Department Captain Dori Koren, at around 10:30 a.m. on Saturday, a caller reported that their neighbor had been found dead on the side of their house in the 7200 block of Bronze Circle, which is close to North Tenaya Way.

German, 69, was found outside of his house with stab wounds by police. The stabbing occurred on Friday late morning, and police believe it was the result of an argument with another person.

Koren stated that they believe the stabbing to be an isolated incident and that the public is safe.

According to Cook, German never informed anyone in authority at the Review-Journal about his fears for his safety or any threats that had been made against him.
Carolyn Goodman, the mayor of Las Vegas, expressed shock at hearing of German’s death.

Goodman characterized the incident as “a senseless act of violence.” Death in this way is always shocking and must end. As the police investigation unfolds, we will be keeping a close eye on it.

After more than twenty years at the Las Vegas Sun as a columnist and reporter covering courts, politics, labor, government, and organized crime, German joined the Review-Journal in 2010. Sun reporter-turned-author Cathy Scott made the statement on Sunday. German put in a lot of effort to report on what was going on in the city.
She recalled that in 1997, she and German were the first reporters to report on the murder of Herbert “Fat Herbie” Blitzstein, an associate of the Las Vegas mafia. She claimed that organized crime was a frequent topic of discussion in German media.
He was a tough news guy, Scott said. “He put in long hours and had a wealth of contacts; he was a true newshound through and through. True enough, that’s the kind of guy he was. He worked hard at his profession.

When he did an investigation, it usually resulted in some sort of change, whether it be in procedure or in the people in charge.
His reporting has uncovered claims of bullying, hostility, and mismanagement at the Clark County public administrator’s office as well as extremist activity in Southern Nevada and lapses in city inspections prior to the 2019 Alpine Motel Apartments fire, which killed at least a dozen people.

The Review-“Mobbed Journal’s Up: the Fight for Vegas” podcast is highly regarded, and German was both the show’s writer and host for Season 2.

Through Wayne Newton’s eyes, the eight 2021 episodes chart the rise and fall of organized crime.

This joint audio project between the Review-Journal and the Mob Museum in downtown Detroit focuses on the Aladdin Hotel and its connections to the Detroit underworld in the late 1970s.

Using interviews with prosecutors and elected officials, as well as his own recollections from covering the mob at the time, German recounted the events that led to the creation of the book.

Examining and probing

Beginning in 2017, German and the rest of the Review-investigative Journal’s team looked into the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority.

After reviewing over 32,000 pages of receipts from the authority’s top executives, the reporters published an exposé detailing their extravagant spending on things like high-priced entertainment, gifts for staff, and overseas first-class trips for elected officials who serve on the agency’s board.

The agency also reportedly gave out iPads, golf clubs, and other expensive items worth over $125,000 with little to no accounting, and some of its security officers were taken off their regular duties to drive high-ranking officials around town. After hearing these reports, the convention authority agreed with the recommendations of an accounting firm to reduce spending and restrict board member gifts and travel.

After hearing the stories, an audit was conducted, and it was discovered that several executives had improperly used Southwest Airlines gift cards totaling thousands of dollars.

As a result of the audit, several defendants pleaded guilty to criminal charges in 2020, and the entire executive team was replaced, with longtime CEO Rossi Ralenkotter being ousted.

Specific to Mass Murder

A high-stakes gambler at the Mandalay Bay opened fire from his 32nd-floor suite, killing 60 people and himself at an outdoor concert in Las Vegas while the Review-Journal was investigating the agency.

German media reported exclusively several days after the shooting that the perpetrator had first fired at two nearby jet fuel tanks, damaging one of them but missing the concert venue itself. As a result, there were demands for increased safety measures, and an outside investigation concluded that the tanks needed more robust security measures.

German also learned that it had been years since any of the casinos on the Strip, including Mandalay Bay, had shown Nevada’s top public safety officials their emergency response plan. In his role as lead investigator, he uncovered evidence that state officials had been slack in their enforcement of a law from 2003 requiring casinos to file such plans.

German’s records reveal a lack of oversight and an admission by officials that they lack criteria by which to evaluate whether or not casino proposals are feasible. The story prompted the state to form a commission charged with revising existing legislation and imposing stricter regulations on casinos.

The Germans heard the tale of a thief who, after being exonerated of robbing three jewelry stores due to government corruption, went back to one of the stores he had previously robbed.

And he led the team that wrote the investigative piece that exposed Clark County DA Steve Wolfson’s decision not to press charges against a longtime aide who stole nearly $42,000 from the 2014 campaign to fund a video poker habit. Wolfson let Audrie Locke, his assistant, resign in private so she could seek help for her gambling addiction without involving the legal system.

After finishing her therapy, she returned the loan and was rehired.
For over three years, the theft went unnoticed until 2014, when German and another reporter obtained copies of private emails between Wolfson and Locke discussing the theft. Faced with the emails, both Wolfson and Locke agreed to interviews and confirmed the cover-up.

Wolfson attracted an opponent in his reelection race and lost key endorsements after being criticized for appearing to give preferential treatment to a close aide.
German, who had a master’s from Marquette, wrote “Murder in Sin City: The Death of a Las Vegas Casino Boss” (2001), the story of the murder of Ted Binion, heir to the Horseshoe Club fortune.

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