MBBS Admission Fraud Alert: ₹2.35 Crore Hyderabad Case, Delhi-NCR NEET Racket, Fake NRI Documents & Guaranteed Seat Scams
A serious student-safety alert on MBBS admission frauds in India, including The Hindu’s Hyderabad report, Economic Times’ Delhi-NCR NEET racket report, fake NRI certificate cases, forged allotment letters and fake guaranteed-admission promises.
MBBS Admission Fraud Alert: Parents and NEET Aspirants Must Read Before Paying Anyone
MBBS admission is one of the most emotional decisions for any family. Every year, lakhs of NEET aspirants and parents search for genuine guidance, college options, management quota details, NRI quota rules, counselling support, education loans and scholarships.
But this pressure is also being misused by fraud networks. Recent reports from reputed media organisations show a worrying pattern: fake guaranteed MBBS seats, forged allotment letters, illegal use of student data, fake NRI documents, direct-admission promises, false management quota claims and money collection through agents.
This blog is not written to create fear. It is written to protect students and parents.
- 1.The Hindu report: Two held in ₹2.35 crore MBBS admission fraud, over 100 parents allegedly duped
According to The Hindu’s Hyderabad report dated February 27, 2026, Petbasheerabad police arrested two individuals in connection with a medical admission fraud where parents of MBBS aspirants were allegedly cheated on the promise of management quota seats.
The report identified the accused as Argadapa Arvind Rao alias Aditya Kumar alias Adithya Deshmukh and Kusume Venkata Rao. Police reportedly seized forged seat allotment letters, fake agreements and mobile phones containing digital evidence.
The case came forward after a parent from Jeedimetla in Medchal-Malkajgiri district complained that he was induced to pay ₹39.54 lakh for securing an MBBS seat for his daughter. He was later allegedly given forged seat allotment letters and fabricated documents.
As per the report, police said the accused targeted parents of NEET-qualified students through tele-callers using illegally procured data. They allegedly promised MBBS seats under management quota in medical colleges across India, collected money through bank transfers and cash, issued fake documents and later evaded the victims.
The investigation reportedly found that more than 100 parents from Telangana, Karnataka, Maharashtra, Delhi, West Bengal and other States were cheated, with the total fraud amount estimated at around ₹2.35 crore.
- 2.Economic Times report: ₹30 lakh for MBBS, doctor-led NEET racket busted in Delhi-NCR
The Economic Times reported another serious NEET-related racket from Delhi-NCR. As per the report, Delhi Police busted a scam in which four individuals, including a doctor, were arrested for allegedly taking ₹20–30 lakh from parents or guardians by promising guaranteed MBBS admissions.
Police also reportedly rescued 18 NEET aspirants, including minors, from a flat in Ghaziabad. These students had allegedly been separated from their guardians on the false promise of receiving “important exam questions.”
The report said the racket came to light after a tip-off from Surat. The accused allegedly used fake question papers, logistics arrangements and broker networks to exploit the anxiety of NEET aspirants and parents.
Read Economic Times main article
- 3.NDTV report: Four held for fake MBBS admission racket, 18 NEET aspirants rescued
NDTV also reported on the Delhi-NCR fake MBBS admission racket. According to the report, raids at a Ghaziabad flat led to the rescue of more students, and police said the accused had created a planned operation to exploit medical aspirants.
The alleged method included fake question papers prepared from previous years’ material and coaching content, brokers approaching families, and arrangements to keep students away from their guardians before the examination.
This shows that MBBS scams are not limited to fake college letters. Some rackets also try to manipulate exam fear, paper-leak rumours and “inside question” claims.
- 4.Fake NRI document racket: Reports mention around 18,000 admissions under scanner
A separate and very serious issue relates to fake NRI quota documents. NDTV reported that the Enforcement Directorate investigated a racket where fake documents were allegedly used for admissions under the NRI quota in medical colleges.
According to the report, the investigation involved the Ministry of External Affairs and Indian embassies. It reportedly found that private medical colleges offered about 18,000 MBBS admissions to students using fake documents.
The report said fake embassy documents, fake family trees, repeated use of the same documents for multiple candidates, fake NRI certificates and notary stamps were part of the alleged irregularities.
Read NDTV main article on fake NRI documents
Careers360 also reported the fake NRI certificate issue, stating that reports pointed to forged NRI quota certificates, agents and medical-college-linked intermediaries.
- 5.MCC warning: Fake allotment letters and fake websites are a known danger
The Medical Counselling Committee is the official body for MCC UG counselling for All India Quota and certain institutional categories. MBBS/BDS counselling for official seats is not done through random agents, social media pages or private promises.
MCC’s official website has archived notices related to fake allotment letters, fake admission forms, fake websites and suspicious persons.
Read MCC official UG counselling page
Read MCC archive page with fake allotment/fake website notices
NDTV had also reported earlier that MCC warned students against fake allotment or nomination letters. The warning was clear: candidates should not trust letters issued by suspicious persons claiming to represent MCC.
Read NDTV report on MCC fake allotment warning
- 6.Other reported MBBS fraud patterns parents must notice
- A.Fake guaranteed MBBS seat promise
Fraudsters often say:
“Seat confirmed.” “Counselling not needed.” “College management has approved.” “Pay token amount today.” “We have direct connection with college.” “Your NEET score is low but we can still manage.”
No genuine MBBS admission should be treated as confirmed unless it is visible through the official counselling process and verified from the official authority or college.
- B.Fake management quota seat
Management quota does not mean illegal direct sale of seats through agents. For MBBS in India, admission must be linked to NEET eligibility and official counselling rules. Any person who says “no counselling needed” or “private entry possible” should be treated as a red flag.
- C.Fake allotment letter
A forged allotment letter may look official. It may contain college name, logo, fake signature, fake payment instruction and even fake reporting date.
Before trusting any letter, verify:
Is it downloaded from the official counselling portal? Does it match your login dashboard? Does the college confirm it through official email/office? Is the payment being asked through official channel only? Is any agent forcing urgent cash or bank transfer?
- D.Fake NRI certificate or fake sponsor
NRI quota admission requires strict documentation. Fake embassy papers, fake family trees, fake sponsor documents or paid NRI names can create serious legal problems for students and families.
A fake NRI route can damage the student’s admission, legal standing and future medical career.
- E.Fake question-paper or paper-leak promise
Some rackets tell students that they can provide “important questions,” “leaked paper,” “special set,” or “inside NEET material.” Such promises are dangerous, illegal and often used to trap students and parents.
Students should never pay anyone for such claims.
- F.Social media and tele-caller traps
Many scams begin from:
Instagram ads WhatsApp messages Telegram groups Unknown counsellor calls Fake websites YouTube comment replies “Low budget MBBS” posts “Direct admission” pages “Management seat confirmed” campaigns
If someone contacts you first and already knows your NEET details, it does not prove authenticity. It may mean your data has been leaked or bought illegally.
- 7.Quick safety checklist before paying for MBBS admission
Before paying even ₹1, verify these points:
Is the college recognised and listed in official records? Is the counselling authority official? Is the seat visible in official counselling result or allotment system? Is the payment going directly to the authorised institution or official portal? Is the person giving written legal accountability? Is the person avoiding official verification? Is there pressure to pay today? Are they promising guaranteed admission despite low rank? Are they asking for cash, blank cheque or original documents? Are they saying “do not tell anyone” or “this is internal process”?
If the answer to any suspicious point is yes, stop immediately.
- 8.Important warning for parents
Do not hand over original marksheets, NEET scorecard, certificates, passports, blank cheques or large advance payments to any unknown consultant, agent or tele-caller.
Do not believe anyone who says:
“Money can confirm MBBS.” “Rank does not matter.” “We can bypass counselling.” “College has secret seats.” “NRI document can be arranged.” “Pay now, allotment letter will come later.”
These are high-risk statements.
- 9.How ILMALINK MEDIGO wants students to stay safe
ILMALINK MEDIGO believes MBBS guidance must be transparent, document-based and counselling-process-based.
We do not support fake guaranteed seat promises.
We do not support illegal direct admission.
We do not support fake NRI documents.
We do not support payment to unknown agents.
Our focus is to help students understand:
NEET rank and score-based possibilities Official counselling process Management quota reality College verification Fee structure Scholarship and loan support Document safety India and abroad MBBS options Fraud warning signs
Visit ILMALINK MEDIGO NEET Hub
Ask ILMALINK MEDIGO for safe MBBS admission guidance
- 10.Final message to NEET aspirants
Your MBBS dream is precious. Do not put it in the hands of fake agents, pressure callers or “guaranteed seat” sellers.
A genuine counsellor will explain process, risk, documentation, rank-based possibility and official route.
A fraudster will create urgency, fear and secrecy.
Before paying anyone, verify everything.
Before trusting any allotment letter, check the official portal.
Before taking the NRI route, verify every document legally.
Before believing a direct admission promise, ask one question:
“If this is genuine, why is it not through the official counselling process?”
Stay alert. Stay informed. Protect your NEET journey.
Source articles and official references:
Read Economic Times main article
Read NDTV Delhi-NCR fake MBBS admission racket report
Read NDTV fake NRI document report
Read Careers360 fake NRI certificate report
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