Sept, 1971

James Plumeri, a reputed Mafia figure known as Jimmy Doyle, was buried in St. John's Cemetery in Queens yesterday after a private, Roman Catholic funeral service. Doyle was found murdered on a Queens street Friday.
A funeral service was held at the chapel of the Scarpaci Funeral Home, at 1401 86th Street, in the Bay Ridge section of Brooklyn, shortly after A.M. Mourners complained of attempts by television crews to take pictures.
Plumeri, who was 68 years old, was found with a plastic bag over his head and a silk necktie drawn taut around his neck on a Maspeth street. No arrests have been announced.
Identified by law enforcement agencies as a “captain” in a Mafia family once headed by the late Thomas Luchese, Plumeri had served a prison term for filing false income tax returns and had also been sentenced on bribery and kickback charges involving the pension fund of an International Brotherhood of Teamsters union.
Because of ills health, his prison term in the teamster case was suspended.