Daughter of jailed Mexican Mafia kingpin sentenced to prison

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The daughter of an imprisoned Mexican Mafia kingpin who pleaded guilty to racketeering and drug trafficking charges and admitted carrying out her father’s orders in running a brutal Los Angeles street gang was sentenced yesterday to 15 years in prison.

The sentencing of 39-year-old Vianna Roman marked the final chapter in a lengthy federal case targeting the Harpys street gang that saw a total of 29 defendants charged under the US Racketeer-Influences and Corrupt Organizations Act.

She is the daughter of Danny Roman, who prosecutors say oversaw the Harpys despite his incarceration in northern California’s super-maximum-security Pelican Bay State Prison.

Prosecutors say Vianna Roman acted as her father’s surrogate, controlling the gang on her father’s behalf of Danny Roman while he was locked away at Pelican Bay.

Vianna Roman pleaded guilty last year to racketeering, narcotics and weapons charges.

Of the 29 defendants originally charged in the case, 25 have been convicted while three remain fugitives. Federal charges were dismissed against one other defendant following his state court conviction on murder charges.