I'm pretty sure that on the D9200, the degauss is controlled by the microcontroller. A PTC is provided only to limit things in the event it gets "stuck on" for whatever reason so that the coil doesn't overheat. As such, it may be quite a bit more "leaky" than the PTC on a monitor with the degauss controlled by a big ol' power pushbutton or that just chucks it straight across the AC input with the PTC to cut it out (providing for "degauss on startup").
In this setup, the coil is usually driven by a relay which is in turn driven by a transistor. Chances are that relay is being held "on", which isn't proper. Check for that condition. If that's the case, check the drive transistor and freewheeling diode (which, if failed, may have killed the drive transistor). If the transistor is constantly being told to hold the degauss "on" (check base/gate), then something's gone amok in the MCU, since the transistor is usually driven straight off an MCU IO line. If that's the case, your best (cheapest and most effective) bet is probably to just lift the base/gate of the transistor and ground it to force the degauss off since replacing the MCU is probably out of the question.