The Shocking Raid in Delhi's Dwarka
On April 6, 2026, Delhi Police conducted a raid on a residential flat in the Happy Homes building in Dwarka Sector 23, uncovering a sophisticated cheating operation that targeted online entrance examinations for prestigious colleges. Acting on a tip-off about suspicious gatherings, officers found 33 individuals inside, including the alleged kingpin Harsh Vardhan, a 28-year-old resident of Patna, Bihar. Vardhan was arrested, while 32 students were bound down—legally required to cooperate with the investigation and report travel plans.
The flat served as the nerve center for a multi-crore racket that manipulated at least 10 entrance exams over the past year. Candidates, often repeat aspirants desperate for admission to top institutions, paid hefty fees ranging from Rs 1.5 lakh to Rs 2 lakh per exam for 'guaranteed' success. This scandal has sent shockwaves through India's higher education community, particularly as it implicates students from elite institutions like the Indian Institutes of Technology (IITs), National Institutes of Technology (NITs), and Delhi Technological University (DTU).
How the Remote Access Cheating Network Operated Step-by-Step
The cheating mechanism relied on advanced technology and a well-organized network, exploiting vulnerabilities in online proctored exams. Here's how it unfolded:
- Client Acquisition: Harsh Vardhan and his associates targeted students who had previously failed high-stakes entrance tests. Services were subtly advertised on social media platforms, promising admissions to government and private colleges in Delhi and beyond.
- Remote System Control: On exam day, the gang secured remote access to candidates' computers at test centers using software like remote desktop applications (similar to TeamViewer or AnyDesk). For instance, they infiltrated an IT lab in Jaipur, Rajasthan, for a management entrance exam of a reputed Mumbai institute scheduled for April 7.
- Question Sharing: Candidates photographed or screenshotted questions and shared them instantly via subject-specific WhatsApp groups—physics, chemistry, mathematics, etc.
- Solving Phase: Recruited 'paper solvers'—bright second- and third-year students from top colleges—solved the questions in real-time at the Dwarka flat. An associate named Pranjal, who remains at large, posed these gigs as legitimate internships for solving practice questions from online platforms.
- Answer Relay: Solved answers were relayed back through the remote software, allowing candidates to input them directly. Solvers earned Rs 500 to Rs 1,000 per question, often unaware of the full illegality.
This seamless process undermined the integrity of computer-based tests, highlighting gaps in remote proctoring technologies widely adopted post-COVID-19.
Elite Students as Paper Solvers: Backgrounds and Motivations
Among the 32 bound-down students were high-achievers from India's premier engineering institutions: IITs, NITs, DTU, Jamia Millia Islamia, Maharaja Agrasen College (Delhi University), Motilal Nehru College, and MIT. These solvers were typically proficient in STEM subjects, making them ideal for tackling complex entrance exam problems.
Police sources indicate many were lured with promises of easy money and flexible 'internships.' During questioning, about 15 confessed to solving papers, while others claimed they were attending a casual gathering. This involvement raises questions about peer pressure, financial incentives, and ethical lapses in elite campuses where academic excellence is prized.
In the cutthroat world of Indian higher education, where IIT and NIT admissions define career trajectories, such temptations underscore systemic pressures on even top performers.
Exams Targeted: From Management to Engineering Entrances
The racket impacted over 10 unnamed entrance tests, focusing on admissions to top private and government colleges. A key target was a Mumbai-based management institute's exam at the Jaipur IT lab. Engineering entrances fetched higher fees (Rs 2 lakh), reflecting demand for seats in competitive programs.
Police are verifying the full list, but the operation's Delhi-centric base suggests nationwide reach, compromising merit-based selections in higher education.
Police Investigation Unravels a Larger Network
Harsh Vardhan's possession of multiple candidate admit cards during the raid provided crucial leads. He confessed to coordinating for the Mumbai exam and outsourcing solving tasks. With Pranjal absconding, investigators are probing social media trails, WhatsApp groups, and financial transactions to map beneficiaries and accomplices.
A formal case was registered, with bound-down students aiding the probe. This bust mirrors similar remote-access frauds, like the 2022 Delhi online cheating ring and Uttarakhand SSC scam.
Photo by jaikishan patel on Unsplash
A History of Cheating Scandals in Indian Entrance Exams
This incident fits a disturbing pattern. The 2024 NEET-UG controversy saw 67 perfect scores amid paper leaks, sparking protests. JEE Main 2024 debarred 39 candidates for three years over unfair means. GATE 2026 faced allegations too. Earlier, 2021 JEE paper manipulation led to arrests.
These cases erode public trust in bodies like the National Testing Agency (NTA), which conducts JEE, NEET, and others for over 2 million aspirants annually.
Statistics Revealing the Cheating Epidemic
| Exam | Year | Cheating Incidents Reported | Actions Taken |
|---|---|---|---|
| NEET-UG | 2024 | 67 perfect scores suspected | Supreme Court probe |
| JEE Main | 2024 | 39 debarred | 3-year bans |
| GATE | 2026 | Multiple complaints | Ongoing scrutiny |
| SSC Online | 2026 | Remote access bust | Arrests in UKhand |
While exact cheating rates are elusive, frequent busts indicate thousands affected yearly, with multi-crore operations signaling organized crime infiltration into higher education admissions.
Institutional and Stakeholder Responses
No official statements from IITs, NITs, or DTU yet, but the scandal prompts internal reviews. Experts like education analysts call for stricter ethics training. Parents and genuine aspirants express outrage, fearing tainted merit lists. For more on Indian higher education challenges, see Economic Times coverage.
UGC and NTA may enhance proctoring AI and biometric verification.
Eroding Meritocracy: Long-Term Impacts on Higher Education
Admissions to IITs (23 across India, admitting ~17,000 via JEE Advanced), NITs (31, ~23,000 seats), and DTU symbolize merit. Cheating undermines this, displacing honest students and devaluing degrees. It fosters inequality, as affluent families afford such rackets, widening rural-urban divides.
Reputational damage to implicated institutes could affect global rankings and placements.
Proposed Solutions and Reforms
- Advanced AI proctoring with behavioral analytics.
- Biometrics and randomized question banks.
- Ethics modules in curricula.
- Stricter penalties, including degree revocations.
- Hybrid exam models with physical centers.
Government initiatives like NEP 2020 emphasize integrity; implementation is key. Read Hindustan Times report for details: HT article.
Advice for Students and Educators
Aspiring engineers: Focus on consistent preparation over shortcuts. Report suspicions anonymously. Faculty: Promote integrity discussions. Platforms like AcademicJobs.com offer ethical career paths in higher ed.
Future Outlook for Secure Admissions
With rising tech-savvy frauds, India's higher education must evolve. Blockchain for question delivery and global best practices could restore faith. This scandal, while alarming, may catalyze robust reforms for fairer opportunities.
For related insights, explore Times of India update.









