Ofer Nimrodi

Ofer Nimrodi (Hebrew: עופר נמרודי; born May 23, 1957) is an Israeli jurist, businessman and former publisher.

He graduated cum laude from the Tel Aviv University Law School with an LLB, did his articles with the late Supreme Court Judge Miriam Ben-Porat (later the State Comptroller), and with the late Tel Aviv District Attorney Naomi Stern, and was admitted to the Israeli Bar.

[1] Nimrodi's sister, Ruth Nimrodi-Weissberg, was killed in the Sinai in 1996 when the vehicle she was traveling in drove over an old Egyptian mine in an unmarked minefield.

[citation needed] In 1988, Yaakov Nimrodi purchased the Israel Land Development Company from the Jewish Agency.

Presently, MLP boasts 20 parks across Poland, Austria, Germany, and Romania, with a market cap of €330 million, being publicly traded on the Polish Stock Exchange.

The company engaged in the development of large residential real estate projects by building neighborhoods in Warsaw and Bucharest, commercial real estate through logistic parks in Poland and Romania, shopping malls in Romania, Moldova, and Morocco, and in hotels and resorts in Canada and Morocco.

The decision not to add the 12 months to his prison-time was criticized by the state prosecutor's office upon his release in 2002, expressing concerns that Nimrodi had recidivist tendencies.