A single email sent on the night of May 7, 2026, blew the lid off a massive, inter-state paper leak syndicate, altering the lives of over 22 lakh medical aspirants and their families. While the National Testing Agency (NTA) initially dismissed online whispers of irregularities, it was an exhaustive complaint from a coaching centre teacher in Sikar, Rajasthan, that forced central authorities to act, leading to the cancellation of the NEET-UG 2026 examination.
Behind this historic exposure is a story of a local educator navigating immense pressure, a midnight visit to a police station, and an extensive digital trail that spanned from Haryana to Kerala.
NEET-UG 2026 Paper Leak: Quick Overview
| Key Event | Details and Timeline |
| Examination Name | National Eligibility cum Entrance Test (NEET-UG) 2026 |
| Conducting Body | National Testing Agency (NTA) |
| Exam Date | May 3, 2026 |
| The Evidence | A 150-page PDF “guess paper” matching 135 actual exam questions |
| Estimated Impact | Received by an estimated 10,000+ candidates prior to the test |
| Investigation Agencies | Rajasthan Police Special Operations Group (SOG) & Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) |
The Discovery: From a “Guess Paper” to 600 Marks Matched
The leak unraveled on the evening of the exam, May 3, 2026. Around 6:00 PM—just an hour after the examination concluded—a local physics and chemistry teacher at a prominent coaching hub in Sikar returned to his rented accommodation. There, his landlord presented him with a document that had been circulating under the guise of a “guess paper.”
Upon opening the 150-page digital PDF, the teacher and a senior colleague began cross-referencing its contents with the actual NEET-UG question paper. The match was staggering:
- Biology: 90 out of 90 questions from the actual exam were present in the leaked document.
- Chemistry: All 45 questions matched the actual exam paper.
- Total Value: Out of a 720-mark exam, questions totaling 600 marks were leaked verbatim in handwritten formats days before the test.
The Midnight Race and Local Hesitation
Realizing the magnitude of the crime, the teacher immediately sought a way to report it. However, navigating the bureaucratic landscape proved challenging:
1. The Media Appeal
The teacher initially approached local journalists in Sikar on the night of May 3. Given the unusual circumstances and the explosive nature of the allegation, journalists advised that they could only run the story if a formal institutional or police complaint was registered first.
2. The 1:30 AM Police Station Visit
In the dead of night, at approximately 1:30 AM on May 4, the whistleblower walked into the Udyog Nagar police station in Sikar with a stack of printed pages. According to local police authorities, the staff on duty handed him a blank sheet of paper to file a formal written complaint. Fearing institutional backlash, personal safety, or being framed as part of the scam, the teacher left the station without submitting the written text.
Strategizing the Exposure: Why the NTA Email Was Delayed
For the next three days, the whistleblower and his senior colleague meticulously planned their next move. Speaking to the press anonymously, the senior teacher explained that they spent days researching past legal precedents, including the 2015 All India Pre-Medical Test (AIPMT) paper leak case and subsequent Supreme Court rulings.
The educators were driven by two main concerns:
- Fearing Retaliation: They worried that going public on social media or YouTube would cause the administration to target them instead of the actual culprits, or lead critics to claim they were just making excuses for poorly performing students.
- Protecting Sikar’s Reputation: Sikar is an established national coaching hub. The teachers wanted to ensure the town was recognized for exposing the theft rather than being defamed as its origin point.
Backed by the owner of his coaching institute, the teacher finally drafted a formal email complaint, attaching his digital proof and expressing full willingness to surrender his mobile device for forensic testing. The email was fired off to the NTA, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA), and the CBI at 9:30 PM on May 7, 2026.
Tracking the Leak: From Gurgaon to a Medical Student in Kerala
As the CBI and the Rajasthan SOG took over the case following the whistleblower’s email, the multi-state origin of the leak was mapped out.
The investigation revealed that the paper did not originate in Sikar. Instead, the document had been leaked from a secure link in Gurgaon and purchased by a medical college student in Kerala for a sum allegedly running into lakhs of rupees. Out of a sense of personal friendship, the Kerala student forwarded the file on the night of May 2 to the son of the Sikar landlord. The son then passed it to his father, who ultimately handed it to the whistleblower for evaluation.
The NTA launched an internal verification on May 8, confirming the authenticity of the whistleblower’s document, which ultimately left the government with no choice but to cancel the pan-India exam to preserve academic integrity.
Imput by The New Indian Express












