Natural history on the streets of Tlajomulco
The municipality of Tlajomulco has decided to take Mexico’s natural history out of the museum and on to the streets.
The Guadalajara Reporter
Guadalajara's Largest English Newspaper
The municipality of Tlajomulco has decided to take Mexico’s natural history out of the museum and on to the streets.
An audacious gang of armed criminals managed to steal at least 40 new-model Ford vehicles from a lot in Tlajomulco last week.
July 4, 2017 will go down in history as a great day of victory for the Wixáritari, the Native American tribe commonly known to the larger world as Mexico’s Huichol people.
Jalisco state congressman Juan Carlos Anguiano, member of the Movimiento Ciudadano party,
A scene straight out of a TV crime show unfolded in Zapopan last week, involving two armed thieves in a Toyota Corolla and Zapopan Police, who used their Halcon helicopter to aid squad cars to foil carjackers.
The imminent introduction of “therapeutic justice” in Mexico has some legal experts concerned that the door to impunity will be opened a little wider.
One out of every five tapatios has been a victim of crime in the last year, according to a recent study. In addition, a national survey on public security found that only one out of 1,300 criminal cases are resolved in favor of the victims of crime in this state.
Jaliscienses, it seems, are especially jealous guardians of that salty, oxygen-delivering liquid without which we would quickly cease to exist: blood.
Judging by recent berry exports to China, Dubai, Kuwait and other markets hungry for Mexican-grown fruits, Jalisco is more than pulling its weight in lessening Mexico’s dependence on exports to the United States.