Scranton, PA, Woman Allegedly Signed Deceased Mother's Pension Checks for Nearly $100K

The woman faces multiple felony charges after allegedly stealing $100,000 in fire department pension benefits by forging her deceased mother’s checks.
Feb. 27, 2026
3 min read

Authorities charged the daughter of a deceased Scranton firefighter with collecting nearly $100,000 of his pension benefits over five years.

Stacey Ann Bouton, 48, of 1341 Bryn Mawr St., Scranton, faces multiple felony counts of theft, forgery and identity theft.

The investigation began on Sept. 20, when pension board Solicitor Larry Durkin of the Durkin MacDonald law firm of Dunmore contacted Scranton police regarding potential fraud.

The pension funds originated with Robert Matticks, who was retired from the department in August 1998 and was approved for his pension that same month. Pension documents named Henrietta Matticks as his “survivor beneficiary.”

The family appropriately informed the department of Robert Matticks’ death in 2013, and Henrietta Matticks began receiving a widow’s benefit. She requested the funds be deposited into a Fidelity Bank account she shared with her deceased husband and Bouton, her daughter.

A “direct deposit summary” sent to Henrietta Matticks at that time clearly states any deposits made after her death were to be returned.

On Sept. 20, the pension board was reviewing a list of pension fund recipients and noticed Henrietta Matticks — who died June 10, 2020 — was still on the list.

Pension board President Gary DeStefano was notified and immediately stopped payments to the account.

Officials determined that, after Henrietta Matticks’ death, direct deposits continued to be made to the Fidelity account, totaling $10,051 in 2020; $18,545 in 2021; $18,542 in 2022; $18,542 in 2023; $18,542 in 2024, and $2,300 in 2025, totaling $86,524.

On Feb. 28, 2025, Fidelity Bank began rejecting the direct deposits because the account had been closed.

Mellon Bank, which issued the funds and had never been notified of Henrietta Matticks’ death, began sending paper checks to Bouton’s address, which she had shared with her mother.

A total of 15 checks were issued from March 5, 2025, until the alleged theft was discovered. The checks were cashed with signatures from Bouton and what appeared to be Henrietta Matticks, who was deceased at the time they were issued. Those checks totaled $9,938.

The loss to the pension fund from 2020 to 2025 is reported to be $96,463 dollars.

A warrant has been issued for Matticks, who had not turned herself in as of 1 p.m. Wednesday.

Civil case filed

Meanwhile, on Dec. 9, the Scranton Firefighters Pension Fund sued Bouton in Lackawanna County Court for damages in excess of $50,000.

The allegations in the criminal complaint generally echo claims made in the lawsuit, including that Bouton did not inform the fund of her mother’s death and continued to collect the pension payments; and Bouton in February of 2025 closed the joint bank account with her parents that got direct deposits, and later forged her deceased mother’s signature on pension checks and deposited them into a Bouton bank account.

“Stacey Bouton’s actions were a deliberate theft of Pension Fund proceeds,” according to the lawsuit filed by Durkin.

The lawsuit cites counts of conversion/theft, fraud, unjust enrichment and breach of trust.On Jan. 12, a default judgment in that lawsuit was entered in court in favor of the plaintiff Pension Fund against defendant Bouton for a total of $126,521.

Jim Lockwood, staff writer, contributed to this report.

© 2026 The Times-Tribune (Scranton, Pa.). Visit thetimes-tribune.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

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