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Frank Lowy's Gulfstream G700 lands in Israel amid a brewing constitutional crisis
If aboard, the Westfield co-founder would arrive as the Netanyahu government defies a Supreme Court ruling on media regulation.
By celebplanes · 2 min read · Frank Lowy

Frank Lowy
Frank Lowy's Gulfstream G700, tail number N720LF, was tracked flying from Hoytsville Airport in Utah to Ben Gurion International Airport on July 11–12, 2026. The 12-hour transatlantic leg reached a cruising altitude of 45,000 feet and a top ground speed of 538 knots before touching down near Tel Aviv just before 4 a.m. local time. As always, celebplanes tracks aircraft, not people — but the flight's destination coincides with a moment of high political tension in Israel.
If Frank Lowy was aboard, he would arrive the same week the Israeli government declared it would defy a Supreme Court ruling on media regulation, a move opposition parties and the attorney general have called a constitutional crisis. Per an ABC News report published July 12, the dispute centers on Communications Minister Shlomo Karhi's attempt to replace the Second Authority for Television and Radio's council with political allies, which the court blocked. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government responded by stating the ruling would not be respected, drawing sharp rebukes from President Isaac Herzog and others.


The timing is notable given the Lowy family's deep ties to both Australia and Israel. Frank Lowy, a Holocaust survivor and co-founder of the Westfield Corporation, has long been a prominent philanthropist and businessman in Israel. His son Steven Lowy is currently fronting a royal commission in Australia on antisemitism and social cohesion, where he argued that armed Jewish security could have saved lives during the Bondi Beach terror attack last December, as covered by EuropeSays. The elder Lowy's arrival in Israel — if he was on the flight — places him in the country as its government tests the limits of judicial authority.
This is not an isolated trip. The same Gulfstream G700 was tracked on July 10 flying from a location near Budapest, Hungary, to Los Angeles, suggesting a multi-leg journey that may have included a stop in Utah before the final leg to Tel Aviv. Frank Lowy maintains residences in both Australia and Israel, and the aircraft's movements often align with business or philanthropic engagements. Whether this particular flight is tied to the political crisis, family matters, or the Lowy Institute's work remains speculative — but the convergence of the aircraft's arrival with a major legal showdown in Jerusalem gives the journey a quiet, pointed context.
Aboard the Gulfstream G700


The aircraft
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