Elderly expat found dead in Ajijic apartment
U.S. citizen Edward Joseph Levinson, 84, was found dead in the Ajijic apartment where he lived early Monday, July 6.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
U.S. citizen Edward Joseph Levinson, 84, was found dead in the Ajijic apartment where he lived early Monday, July 6.
A University of Guadalajara research project is looking into a possible link between the pesticide Lindane and the incidence of childhood obesity among youngsters aged two to five born in Chapala and Jocotepec.
A huge work crew is laboring furiously to complete the massive reconstruction of Chapala’s Avenida González Gallo by the end of this month.
Leaders of the Chapala area business community are anxious to see a dynamic and well-qualified person take charge as chief officer of the regional branch of Jalisco’s Ministry of Tourism (Seturjal).
A Jocotepec police officer is among four individuals arrested in connection with the brutal murder of a local woman, the apparent victim of a family feud.
Melisa de los Santos Garcia, 20, was found dead in her Jocotepec home on the evening of Wednesday, June 17. Her throat had been slashed and face severely beaten.
Creative teens belonging to the Jocotepec Preparatoria Science Club took top prizes at the Codigo Ciencia science fair held in June 12 and 13 in Guadalajara, earning them qualification to enter their outstanding projects in top-level national and international contests.
Two men gunned down Monday, June 22 in Chapala’s Tepehua barrio have been identified as Romulado Andres Perez Gomez, 31, and his younger brother Ricardo Perez Gómez, 28.
Complying with a recommendation by the Jalisco Human Rights Commission (CEDHJ), members of the Chapala city council voted in favor of offering a public apology to six residents of Ajijic who complained of being subjected to stigmatization and threats derived from their opposition to the government’s street improvement project in the village center.
“Candidates are chosen by political parties, meaning they tend to be individuals twisted by involvement in a deeply-rooted system who are usually not the most adequate persons to hold office nor to the liking of the average citizen,” laments former Chapala Mayor Raul Robles Puga (1992-95) in reflecting on the 2015 elections.