ok i do not know pat dunn, so i did a search on name + ecuador
several articles down from the top
http://www.amcostarica.com/052206.htm
Small service at wife's home planned for Pat Dunn
By the A.M. Costa Rica staff
Pat Dunn opened up his new bar in Manta, Ecuador, in December 2003. He said at the time that he wanted to move his assets to that country because he felt it was open and friendly to business the way Costa Rica was when he first came here 25 years ago.
He met his death at the hands of robbers Thursday morning in Ecuador after having avoided such a fatal confrontation while running a number of nightspots in Costa Rica.
Dunn, 68, whose death was reported in a later version of A.M. Costa Rica Friday, will be returned this week from Ecuador, and his wife and daughter plan a small ceremony at their home adjacent to Posada Amรยณn, the business they own in Barrio Amรยณn in north San Josรยฉ. They are not sure when the body will be returned.
Although he no longer had a role in management, Dunn is frequently identified with the Dunn Inn, a 1920s mansion on Avenida 11 at calle 5 that was converted into a hotel in 1989.
More recently he was the operator of Tentaciones night club on Avenida 1 and the operator of the New York Bar and Lucky's Piano Bar on the pedestrian boulevard in the downtown. He had operated the Bar Nashville in San Josรยฉ.
Nearly everyone who has had a few drinks in downtown San Josรยฉ met Dunn because he liked talking to people. He was not judgmental and shared his time with tourists, expats and others with less savory occupations.
"People come to Costa Rica because they are looking for someone, or someone is looking for them," he used to say, according to an acquaintance who dropped a note to this newspaper over the weekend.
Despite his genial personality, Dunn also was very private and would not even talk much about how he nearly lost his life to a gasoline fire at his garage. He suffered severe burns over the right side of his body and spent months recovering.
The bar in Manta, Nashville South, was developed to sell, Dunn said. His daughter, Jennifer
Dunn, said he had sold the establishment but that the buyer failed to follow through. That bar, too, was mostly for expats. Nearby is Eloy Alfaro Air Base, since 1999 a key U.S. installation for anti-drug patrols over the ocean and drug interdiction activities in Colombia and other Latin American countries.
The robbers Thursday were believed after an estimated $1,500 that Dunn kept for operating capital at the bar. He lived at the establishment which is on the Malecรยณn, the principal walkway at the Pacific port town. The cost of bringing Dunn home was unexpected for his daughter and wife, Elvia Jahara Jarquin Tellez. His daughter said the family was having trouble getting together the cost of a casket, some $3,000 and the estimated airline charge of about $2,000. They have been in contact with the Costa Rican Embassy there because Dunn, who came from Texas, had Costa Rican citizenship at the time of his death.
They said that friend who wanted to help them meet these expenses could donate to a Banco de Costa Rica account 937-0010388-8 that is in the name of his wife.