It was meant to be India's most secure medical entrance test. The National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET) is the gateway to becoming a doctor, taken by over two million students each year. But on the morning of 7 May 2024, something went catastrophically wrong.
Hours before the exam, leaked question papers were circulating on WhatsApp groups and encrypted messaging apps. Students in Bihar, Gujarat, and Rajasthan reported receiving screenshots of the biology section. The price: up to ₹50 lakh. The source: a network of coaching centres, middlemen, and rogue officials.
I spoke to a whistleblower from a coaching institute in Kota, the hub of India's exam prep industry. "We've known about leaks for years," he said, speaking on condition of anonymity. "But this time, the scale was unprecedented. The paper reached students in at least eight states."
The modus operandi is chillingly simple. A few days before the exam, a select group of students are invited to "special classes" in private farmhouses. They are given the exact questions, along with answer keys. Memorisation is forbidden; instead, they are taught to mark the correct options without hesitation.
How does the paper get out? The National Testing Agency (NTA), which conducts NEET, outsources printing to private presses. Security protocols exist but are easily bypassed. Bribes to staff, unlocked cabinets, faulty CCTV cameras. One source told me that a printing press worker simply photographed the paper and uploaded it to a cloud server.
Then come the middlemen. Rajesh (not his real name) is a former teacher who now operates as a broker in Patna. He claims to have helped over 100 students cheat in the past three years. "The demand is huge," he said. "Rich parents will do anything to get their children into medical school. We are just supplying the demand."
The profit margins are staggering. A single leaked paper can yield crores in a matter of hours. The network is decentralized: different nodes handle different regions. There are recruiters, distributors, and safe-house operators. Payment is often in cryptocurrency or cash, making tracing difficult.
The impact on honest students is devastating. For every seat secured by a cheater, a deserving candidate loses out. The Indian Medical Association has called for a CBI investigation. But arrests so far have been minimal; fewer than 20 people have been detained.
One student, who scored in the top percentile despite knowing about the leak, told me: "I studied for two years. I gave up everything. And then I find out that someone who paid ₹30 lakh gets the same rank? It makes you want to give up."
The NTA has promised to review security protocols. They are considering digital delivery of question papers directly to exam centres. But critics argue that the rot runs deeper. A culture of high-stakes exams, massive coaching industry, and weak enforcement creates a perfect storm.
As I write this, the investigation is ongoing. But the questions remain: who at the top is protecting this network? And how many more years will India's medical exam be a test of money rather than merit?
The shadow network operates in the grey zones of the system, exploiting desperation and inequality. Until the government treats paper leaks as a national security threat, the cycle will continue. Students will keep studying. Middlemen will keep profiting. And the dream of becoming a doctor will be for sale to the highest bidder.








