In more recent months, Douglas Daniel, brother of family kingpin Jamie, was jailed alongside his wife Barbra for the evil treatment of children in their care.
The notorious Daniel crime clan family controlled the drug networks in Glasgow, raking in tens of millions of pounds across the decades.
Their infamous reign over the city saw a violent feud erupt between the rival Lyons family, with years of murders, shootings and stabbings. Bitter hits saw those with key links to the family jailed for years at a time.
But in more recent months, Douglas Daniel, brother of family kingpin Jamie, was jailed alongside his wife Barbra for the evil treatment of children in their care. Douglas, 80, and Barbra, 75, were jailed for 30 months at Glasgow Sheriff Court in March.
The depraved pair were sentenced after being found guilty of subjecting six children – aged between four and 14 – to cruel and unnatural treatment at their Parkhead home between 1986 and 1991.
The disgraced pensioners, now of Herne Bay in Kent, were each convicted of six charges following a trial in Glasgow in January. It heard how the pair dished out horrific punishment methods, which included forcing some of the youngsters into an animal pen.
Another victim was made to stand with geese who pecked her skin, while a further girl was ordered to bathe in a bird bath. Some kids went hungry under their roof, but one recalled being fed cow tongue intended for pet ferrets by “evil” Barbara.
At least one child was made to sit on the floor alongside pet dogs during mealtimes. The children were also subjected to violent physical assaults and controlling behaviour. They were locked in rooms, monitored with alarmed windows, and had their access to the bathroom restricted, including only being allowed one square of toilet paper.
Some of the children were forced to stand facing the wall for hours, occasionally on one leg, and sometimes to the point of collapse. Douglas Daniel was allowed to care for the young victims despite having a string of previous convictions.
One of their survivors now intends to sue Glasgow City Council as Douglas had a significant criminal record when he was approved as a foster carer.
So who are the Daniel clan? Here, the Record takes a look at the history of the crime group and the family tree.
Jamie Daniel
Kingpin Jamie was said to have made £16 million per year from his criminal enterprise as head of the notorious Daniel clan before his death at the age of 58 in 2016 after a four-year battle with cancer.
His life of crime started on the streets of Possilpark stealing scrap metal and shoplifting, before he moved on to selling drugs. Aged 25, he was jailed for heroin smuggling and after he was released he forged links with crooks across the UK and is said to have continued to import drugs from Pakistan.
Jamie was believed to have been the main heroin supplier in Glasgow for decades and also was said to earn up to £1 million a month from cigarette smuggling. He was linked to the murder of gangster Frank McPhie, who was gunned down by a sniper outside his Maryhill home in 2000.
Nearing the end of his life, he signed himself out of hospital five days before his death at home in Jordanhill. His funeral at Clydebank Crematorium was attended by 600 people.
Many of Daniel’s ten children were in attendance at his funeral, including Kelly Bo Green, Francis ‘Fraggle’ Green and Zander Sutherland, with the latter being released from prison for the day.
Norman Daniel
The Record reported over a decade ago how Norman, also known as Snudger, and his brothers David, Jamie and Ronnie went from petty criminals on the streets of Possilpark to becoming Scotland’s richest and most secretive crime clan.
The brothers started with shoplifting, loan-sharking and stealing scrap, but ended up building a £16million crime empire from stolen cars, firearms and major drug smuggling.
Another Daniel brother, William served time for killing Special Police Constable George Gates, 50, in 1969. He battered the off-duty officer to death with a table leg as he’d witnessed him and two friends stealing copper.
Norman became a victim in a latest round of firebomb attacks last year. The pensioner’s home at Colston Drive in Bishopbriggs was torched in the early hours of April 14, 2025.
Footage showed the 72-year-old’s bungalow-type property engulfed in flames after his home was targeted by thugs linked to a Dubai-based gangster.
Steven “Bonzo” Daniel
Steven “Bonzo” Daniel – Jamie’s nephew – assumed control of the group as Jamie Daniel’s successor. A year after his death, Bonzo was subjected to a horrific murder bid that left him disfigured for life.
He was ambushed by members of the rival Lyons group following a Rangers match at Ibrox in May 2017. Bonzo was in his dark blue Skoda Octavia when he was pursued by two cars in a high-speed chase, causing him to stop.
He was attacked with bladed weapons near the M8 motorway in Port Dundas just after midnight. Police said following the incident in the city’s Port Dundas area, the two cars made off in an easterly direction.
Emergency services attended and Mr Daniel was taken by ambulance to hospital, where his condition was described as stable. A court later heard his car had been fitted with a tracking device.
Two years later, six associates of the Lyons family were jailed after being found guilty of five murder plots. Lord Mulholland told them: “You sought to turn Glasgow into a war zone for your feud.”
Now head of the group, the 45-year-old has been the target of several attacks in the past eight years as part of the long running feud with the Lyons. The most recent was last April at his luxury home in Bishopbriggs, near Glasgow, when the front door was set on fire.
The hood fled to the Middle East following the incident but returned to Glasgow the next month after reports suggested footsoldiers ordered to kill him were tracking his movements.
Bonzo was said to be at the top of McGill’s list of high-profile targets and a £100k bounty was placed on his head. Bonzo was wanted over his links to Mark Richardson and a source told the Record he had been forced to return home to protect his family and business interests after they suffered a spate of targeted attacks.
Francis “Fraggle” Green
Green is the son of feared crime boss Jamie. In 2010 the 42-year-old was one of the first on the scene following the murder of his brother-in-law Kevin “Gerbil” Carroll outside an Asda supermarket in Robroyston, Glasgow. Green later admitted in court eating the sim card from two phones he was carrying at the time.
He was jailed for three-and-a-half years for attacking a grandmother, Susanne Simpson, in the Cairn Bar in Balornock in 2011.
Susanne had been involved in a rammy with his sister, Kelly-Bo, but she phoned for back up and Fraggle arrived along with cousin Robert Daniel and two other men. They launched a vicious attack on Susan, leaving her with a fractured cheekbone, scalp damage and bruising.
In 2017 a gunman opened fire on his home in Milton of Campsie, near Glasgow. A motor company in Kirkintilloch, East Dunbartonshire, previously connected to Green, was set on fire in April.
Chilling clips posted online showed motors covered in flames following the attack, which was claimed by Ross McGill’s ‘Tamu Junto’ group, as they warned they were targeting allies of Mark Richardson.
It was later revealed that Fraggle was listed as a former director of the vehicles business.
Zander Sutherland
The 36-year-old is another of Jamie’s sons and is the younger brother of Fraggle. Zander was sentenced to 13 and half years in prison in 2016 for heroin dealing.
Last year he fled to Norway while on leave from Caste Huntly open prison, near Dundee, after death threats. He was then extradited back to Scotland in December. Sutherland got an extra 10 months added to his sentence at Perth Sheriff Court.
Zander was given day-release from Addiewell Prison in 2016 to attend his dad’s funeral, after being allowed to visit him in hospital the previous week to say goodbye. He helped carry his dad’s coffin into the crematorium but was escorted by three G4S security guards throughout the service.
Kevin ‘Gerbil’ Carroll
Gerbil was a feared gangland enforcer for the Daniel crime clan who was shot dead in a targeted attack in 2010. He lived in Lennoxtown, East Dunbartonshire, with his partner, Kelly Green – a daughter of Jamie Daniel.
In December 2006, Applerow Motors in Possilpark was the site of a high-profile “Godfather-style” hit. Two gunmen from the Daniel clan, Raymond Anderson and James McDonald, opened fire at the garage, killing Michael Lyons, the nephew of owner, and Daniel clan rival, David Lyons, and wounding his son, Mark Lyons, along with associate Robert Pickett.
Gerbil was widely believed to have sanctioned or been involved in planning the 2006 attack on Applerow Motors. Underworld sources claimed that the Lyons family subsequently “sanctioned the hit” on Carroll as direct retaliation for this and other attacks.
Gerbil was gunned down in 2010 as he sat in the back seat of an Audi in the Asda car park in Robroyston. The son-in-law of mobster Jamie Daniel, he was known for kidnapping and torturing rival drug dealers in attacks dubbed “alien abductions”.
Ross Monaghan – who was shot dead alongside Eddie Lyons Jnr in Fuengirola last year – was arrested over the shooting but was acquitted after a judge at the High Court in Glasgow ruled there was insufficient evidence to convict him.
William ‘Buff’ Paterson, 45, was later convicted of the murder in 2015 and sentenced to a minimum of 22 years in prison.
Robert Daniel
Robert is the cousin of Steven Daniel. In November last year, two workers were attacked with a machete and seriously injured at a garage owned by Daniel in East Kilbride. Daniel was believed to be the intended target. The 50 year old was shot and seriously injured in 2017 outside his home in Stepps, Glasgow as he reversed his car.
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