Rajasthan Police Bust Paper Leak Racket, Arrest 4 For Helping Paramedical Students Pass Exams For Rs 5.5 Lakh

Police have recovered  diaries, WhatsApp chats and admit card PDFs during the probe, revealing planned conspiracy. 

Rajasthan Paper Leak Racket Busted Edited by
Rajasthan Police Bust Paper Leak Racket, Arrest 4 For Helping Paramedical Students Pass Exams For Rs 5.5 Lakh

Rajasthan Police Bust Paper Leak Racket, Arrest 4 For Helping Paramedical Students Pass Exams For Rs 5.5 Lakh

Jaipur, Rajasthan: Jaipur police have busted an  alleged cheating racket involving first-year paramedical examinations, with shocking details emerging regarding the conditions at one of the examination centres. Police have arrested four people including collage authorities for allegedly helping 45 first-year paramedical students clear their examinations in exchange for Rs 5.5 lakh.

In the exam centre, several students claimed they faced delays, confusion and multiple irregularities during the exam. Police have recovered  diaries, WhatsApp chats and admit card PDFs during the probe, revealing planned conspiracy, India Today reported.

Read Also: ‘BJP Govt Responsible’: Youth Congress Demands Education Minister’s Resignation Over NEET Paper Leak

Notably, students from another exam centre, the Prabha Devi Memorial examination centre, also alleged that they did not receive their question papers on time. While candidates on the ground floor received their papers as scheduled, those on the fourth floor had to wait for hours before the papers reached them. The delay led to confusion inside the examination centre, with many students alleging that they were left waiting even after the exam had begun.

Candidates also claimed that several students were made to write the examination under temporary tents instead of classrooms. The exam arrangement, the students claimed, raised questions about the conduct and environment of the test.

Read Also: NTA Announces Fresh NEET UG 2026 Re-Exam On June 21, After Cancelling Test Over Paper Leak

The incident has sparked demands from students for greater transparency in the conduct of examinations.