Jørgen Kornelius Nordvik (28 November 1895 – 21 July 1977[1]) was a Norwegian jurist.
He was a member of the party Nasjonal Samling before the Second World War and worked as an attorney in Lillehammer.
However, during the subsequent occupation of Norway by Nazi Germany a career path opened for him.
In February 1941 he was appointed as Norwegian Director of Public Prosecutions to replace Haakon Sund who had been fired for anti-German sentiments.
[2][3] During the legal purge in Norway after World War II he was convicted of treason, and sentenced to fourteen years of forced labour.