Three Former City Correction Officers Plead Guilty  to Sick Leave Fraud

Three Former City Correction Officers Plead Guilty to Sick Leave Fraud

Photo Courtesy of DOI

DOI Commissioner Strauber called the three former officers’ conduct “an insult to the correction officers who do their jobs, who show up to work and risk their personal safety on a daily basis.”

By Forum Staff

Former City Correction Officer Eduardo Trinidad has pleaded guilty to federal program fraud, admitting that he fraudulently obtained his salary from the City Department of Correction (DOC) by taking sick leave even though he was able to work, federal prosecutors announced Tuesday.

Last month, former City Correction Officers Steven Cange and Monica Coaxum also pleaded guilty to the same charge.

“The defendants have admitted stealing taxpayer funds by collecting their full salaries while falsely claiming they were too sick to work,” said Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Breon Peace. “Sick leave abuse is a plague on the New York City Department of Correction that puts fellow officers and inmates at risk during the ongoing staffing crisis in the jails. This Office is working with our federal and local law enforcement partners to identify those who exploit the sick leave policy and hold them accountable.”

According to court documents and facts presented at the guilty plea proceedings, Cange, 49, fraudulently obtained more than $139,000 in salary while on sick leave from March 2021 to November 2022. During that period of time, Cange submitted more than 100 fraudulent medical notes to DOC claiming that he was at physical therapy or another medical provider when records subpoenaed from those providers demonstrate that Cange was not at those appointments. Law enforcement also observed Cange engaging in normal life activities with no apparent difficulty.

Coaxum, 36, fraudulently obtained more than $80,000 in salary while on sick leave from March 2021 to April 2022, and Trinidad, her fiancée, fraudulently obtained more than $119,000 in salary while on sick leave from June 2021 to October 2022. Although Coaxum claimed to suffer from multiple injuries, evidence collected by investigators showed that she was able to work. During her sick leave, Coaxum submitted nearly 50 fraudulent medical notes to DOC stating that she had gone to a medical appointment at a time when law enforcement determined she was elsewhere. Additionally, evidence showed that on some occasions when Coaxum claimed to be injured and at home, she was traveling and attending parties.

Trinidad, 42, also claimed that he was unable to work for over a year due to an injury. But video and photographic surveillance showed Trinidad performing home improvement work, bowling, and traveling abroad without any difficulty or help from equipment like an orthopedic boot, sling or cane which he used when attending required check-ins with DOC medical officials.

The defendants were arrested in November 2022 and resigned from the DOC in January 2023.

“These correction officers faked medical documentation to take sick leave they were not entitled to in the midst of a city jail staffing crisis,” said City Department of Investigation Commissioner Jocelyn Strauber. “They violated DOC policy, and they broke the law. Their conduct — including travel around the country, partying, bowling, and home repairs, on stolen sick leave time — is an insult to the correction officers who do their jobs, who show up to work and risk their personal safety on a daily basis.”

When sentenced, all three defendants face a maximum term of 10 years’ imprisonment.

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