Pensacola
Resident Sentenced for
Workers Compensation
Fraud & Perjury
Office
of Statewide Prosecution November
26, 2002
Statewide
Prosecutor Melanie Ann Hines announced today that Ellen NavaniStoneking, 48, of Pensacola, Fl. was
sentenced to 11 months and 29 days in jail, to be followed by
1 year and 1 day home confinement, and 8 years probation. Circuit
Court Judge Linda Nobles imposed the sentence following Stoneking's conviction for worker's compensation fraud and perjury after a
week long trial which concluded September
6, 2002 .
She was also ordered to reimburse the State of Florida for
the costs of investigation and costs of prosecution. The amount
of restitution she must pay will be determined at a subsequent
date.
Stoneking was employed by the City of Key West when
she had carpal tunnel surgery. She moved to Pennsylvania and
filed a claim for workers' compensation benefits against the City
of Key
West and the Florida League
of Cities Municipal Insurance Trust in 1995. After spending four
years in Pennsylvania,
she moved to Pensacola in
1999. Over the years, Stoneking collected
over $169,000 in benefits pursuant to her phony claims and caused
the Florida League of Cities to spend an additional $195,000 on
her behalf or on account of her phony claims.
Stoneking claimed that she could not use her hands because she had residual
carpal tunnel syndrome and was permanently and totally disabled.
She told doctors and also testified under oath in her disability
case that she could not drive, grasp objects, lift more than five
pounds, do daily chores, or any kind of work, and that she stayed
home all day because of her disability.
The Special Investigative Unit of the Florida League of Cities
became suspicious and hired investigators in both Pennsylvania
and Florida, who obtained videotapes of Stoneking driving, loading and unloading furniture in a trailer as part
of her move back to Pensacola, and doing various outside activities
such as digging, gardening, etc., that required grasping, lifting
and strenuous use of her hands. The videotapes were turned over
to the Florida Department of Insurance Division of Fraud which
discovered that Stoneking was also
enrolled as a full time student in the Brownsville Revival School
of Ministry and was active in various school activities, including
playing drums for one of the student music teams.
At the time of her conviction, she stood to receive an estimated
$1 million in future workers' compensation benefits over her lifetime.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION:
Lt. O. B. Bosworth
Florida Department of Insurance Division of Fraud
Telephone: (850) 413-4033
Ronald D. Lee
Assistant Statewide Prosecutor
Telephone: (850) 414-3700
516 North Adams Street ● Post Office Box 784 ● Tallahassee, Florida 32302-0784 ● Phone: (850) 224-7173 ● Fax: (850) 224-6532 ● www.aif.com