police-nabs-agent-selling-pharmacy-exam-paper-minutes-before-test:3-arrested-in-gwalior-after-clip-surfaces-online

Police in Gwalior have intensified action after a suspected exam paper leak surfaced during a Diploma in Pharmacy examination. Based on a viral video, three individuals, including the main accused, Ankesh Dhakad, have been arrested, while efforts are underway to trace other absconding suspects. Incident took place before examination began The incident dates back to April 6, when the Diploma in Pharmacy exam, conducted by Rajiv Gandhi Proudyogiki Vishwavidyalaya (RGPV), was held at RNS Institute of Pharmacy in the Jhansi Road area.
The “Hospital and Clinical Pharmacy” (Code-8110) paper was scheduled from 11:00 AM to 2:00 PM. However, around 10:45 AM—just 15 minutes before the exam—a man was seen outside the center claiming to have the question paper on his mobile phone and attempting to sell it to students. Viral video shows accused offering paper to students In the viral video, the accused, wearing a blue shirt, can be seen showing the alleged question paper to students and negotiating deals, claiming it had been leaked. FIR registered, investigation underway According to Jhansi Road police station in-charge Shakti Singh Yadav, a case has been registered based on the complaint filed by the center superintendent and video evidence. The accused are being interrogated, and a search is ongoing for other suspects. Four students identified from video evidence The matter came to light after a person named Jitendra Mishra sent the video to the examination controller via WhatsApp. During the investigation, four students—Sohel Malik, Virendra Singh Dhakad, Kishan Dhakad, and Deepak Dhakad—were identified as being present at the spot.
Based on the footage, Ankesh Dhakad was identified as the main accused involved in attempting to leak the paper. Question papers were opened under strict supervision Center superintendent Bhupendra Kushwah clarified that the question papers at the examination center were completely secure. The sealed packets were opened at 10:54 AM in the presence of a flying squad and invigilators, and the entire process was videographed.
This indicates that the accused may have attempted to mislead students and gain illegal profit by falsely claiming access to the paper. Police are continuing their investigation to determine whether this was an isolated fraud attempt or part of a larger exam leak network.