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Fake Hall Ticket Scam Shatters NEET Aspirant's Dreams In Kerala
Fake Hall Ticket Scam Shatters NEET Aspirant's Dreams In Kerala

News18

time08-05-2025

  • News18

Fake Hall Ticket Scam Shatters NEET Aspirant's Dreams In Kerala

Last Updated: An Akshaya Centre employee was arrested in Neyyattinkara after she forged a NEET hall ticket for a student whose application she had failed to submit despite accepting payment. A heartbreaking case of negligence and fraud surfaced in Kerala, where a young NEET aspirant's future was derailed by the carelessness of a local Akshaya Centre employee who forged a hall ticket to cover up her own mistake. The police on Monday arrested the Akshaya Centre employee in Neyyattinkara after she forged a NEET hall ticket for a student whose application she had failed to submit despite accepting payment. The student, who aspired to become a veterinary doctor, was caught at an exam centre in Pathanamthitta with a fake admit card, unaware he had been handed a fake document just hours earlier. The accused, identified as Greeshma, a 20-year-old resident of Thirupuram, worked at an Akshaya Centre in Neyyattinkara, Thiruvananthapuram. According to a report by The Times of India, Greeshma accepted Rs 1,850 from the student's mother, who works as a sanitation worker, for submitting the NEET application. But she failed to complete the process and, in a desperate attempt to cover her tracks, fabricated a fake hall ticket. Greeshma reportedly told police that she assumed the student wouldn't actually travel to Pathanamthitta to write the exam. She admitted that after missing the application deadline, she found details of a centre at Thaikkavu Vocational Higher Secondary School through a Google search and inserted them into the forged ticket. She used the credentials of another student to generate the document, mistakenly thinking the deception would go unnoticed. However, the scam unraveled at the examination centre after invigilators became suspicious upon finding mismatched details in the hall ticket – the student's name appeared in one section, but another name was listed elsewhere. The discrepancy led to immediate intervention by the exam centre observer, who filed a formal complaint, prompting a swift police investigation. The student, shocked and confused by the accusation of using a forged document, was briefly detained and questioned. He told investigators that the hall ticket had been given to him directly by the Akshaya Centre employee. This led the Pathanamthitta police to Neyyattinkara, where they arrested Greeshma on Monday. The boy's ordeal has sparked public outrage and sympathy. This was his second attempt at the NEET exam. His family, already battling economic hardship, had borrowed around Rs 2.5 lakh to fund his coaching. His father is mentally challenged and his mother, a cleaning worker, had been praying outside the exam centre the entire time, unaware of the storm unfolding inside. Speaking after the incident, the mother said she only understood the gravity of what had happened when the police explained that her son had been the victim of a scam. Police say the case underscores urgent concerns about oversight at Akshaya Centres, which are meant to provide citizens with transparent and accessible public services. The investigation is ongoing, and the police are trying to determine if this was an isolated incident or part of a broader lapse in the system. First Published:

Akshaya centre employee held for NEET hall ticket forgery
Akshaya centre employee held for NEET hall ticket forgery

Time of India

time05-05-2025

  • Time of India

Akshaya centre employee held for NEET hall ticket forgery

Thiruvananthapuram: Police on Monday arrested an employee of an Akshaya centre in Neyyattinkara for forging a NEET hall ticket for a student after she failed to submit the student's application despite receiving payment. Pathanamthitta police made the arrest following an investigation based on a complaint from the exam centre observer. During questioning, the accused, identified as Greeshma, a resident of Thirupuram, confessed that she accepted Rs 1,850 from the student's mother, who approached the Akshaya centre to apply for the NEET examination. However, she failed to submit the application on time. When the student repeatedly followed up asking for the hall ticket, Greeshma resorted to forging one to cover up her negligence. In her statement, Greeshma admitted that she assumed the student would not actually travel to Pathanamthitta to write the exam. She said that she found details of an exam centre in Pathanamthitta Thaikkavu Vocational Higher Secondary School through a Google search and inserted this as the centre in the forged hall ticket. The forgery came to light on the day of the exam when the invigilator at the Pathanamthitta centre noticed inconsistencies in the hall ticket. The student's name was mentioned in one section of the document, while a different name appeared elsewhere, raising suspicion. The invigilator alerted the authorities, leading to the intervention of the exam centre observer and subsequently police. by Taboola by Taboola Sponsored Links Sponsored Links Promoted Links Promoted Links You May Like Pernas e pés inchados: Experimente isso para ajudar a drenar o fluído do edema aartedoherbalismo Undo Based on the complaint from the observer, a case was registered, and the student who attempted to appear for the exam using the fake hall ticket was arrested. During questioning, the student stated that the hall ticket was handed over by the Akshaya Centre employee, leading the investigation team to Greeshma. Following this lead, Pathanamthitta police reached Neyyattinkara and took Greeshma into custody for questioning. During interrogation she admitted to fabricating the document at the Akshaya centre. She revealed that the forgery was a desperate move after she forgot to complete the student's application despite receiving the fee. The incident has raised serious concerns about oversight at public service centres and the integrity of examination processes. Authorities are continuing their investigation to determine whether more individuals or similar cases are involved.

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