From what I know (and what I can confirm from the EC2 Documentation), Amazon does not charge you for an instance which is stopped. But they do charge for EBS volumes.
Quoting from the documentation:
When you stop an instance, we shut it down. We don't charge hourly
usage for a stopped instance, or data transfer fees, but we do charge
for the storage for any Amazon EBS volumes.
Also quoting from here:
Provisioned IOPS is charged by the amount you
provision in IOPS (input/output operations per second) X the
percentage of days you provision for the month. For example, if you
provision a volume with 1000 IOPS, and keep this volume for 15 days in
a 30 day month, then in the Virginia Region, you would be charged $50
for the IOPS that you provision ($0.10 per provisioned IOPS-Month *
1000 IOPS Provisioned * 15 days/30).
Since you provision the input/output operations, you pay for them even if you don't actually use them. So as long as you have provisoned IOPS, even if the EC2 volume is stopped and even if the EBS volume is not attached to an EC2 instance, you will have to pay for it.
Sorry about the huge bill you got for a service you were not using :( Have you tried contacting Amazon about this issue? Maybe they will reduce the amount or scratch it off from the bill altogether?