I don't think you're wrong, Daniel, but I think there's information we're missing.
Background: a perfectly elastic collision will be one in which kinetic energy is conserved. This is the kind of collision really only seen between uncharged fundamental particles - neutrons, say. In the rest of the world, all collisions are at least slightly inelastic. Think of it as a "second law of thermodynamics" kind of thing.
An inelastic collision, then, is one in which the total kinetic energy after the collision is different - generally less - that it was before.
When someone describes a "sticky" collision, that's almost a textbook case of an inelastic collision. If the two objects do, in fact, stick together even briefly, it will take some energy for them to come apart again, and that will in all probability come out of the kinetic energy. I am therefore not surprised that you found a different kinetic energy after the collision. That's exactly what one would expect.
The only thing that holds true in both elastic and inelastic collisions is conservation of momentum. Linear momentum is absoutely conserved - one of the few quantities in the universe for which that's true. Consequently, that's pretty much the place to start in analyzing any collision.
So - forgive my verbosity on this, but would it be possible for you to post the problem exactly as it's written, including the instructions? It might make it easier for us to figure out what's going on.