The NEET-UG 2026 paper leak investigation has taken a serious turn after the Central Bureau of Investigation reportedly told a Delhi court that the leak may trace back to a source inside the National Testing Agency.
The case relates to the cancellation of NEET-UG 2026 after central agencies found that the examination paper had been compromised. Around 22.7 lakh students appeared for the examination across more than 500 cities before the exam was cancelled and a fresh test was ordered.
CBI Claims Paper Came Through Alleged NTA Source
According to the CBI’s submission before the Delhi court, one of the accused, Shubham Khairnar, allegedly obtained the paper from a Pune-based person. That person, according to the agency, had allegedly received it from an “NTA source.”
The court recorded this claim while granting custody of five accused persons to the CBI.
The agency has said that it is now trying to identify:
- the alleged NTA source,
- any officials involved,
- other government functionaries,
- and the larger network behind the leak.
This is one of the most serious angles in the investigation because it raises questions about how the question paper allegedly moved out of official custody.
Telegram PDF Shared Before Exam
As per the CBI’s remand plea, a PDF containing around 500–600 questions was allegedly shared on Telegram as early as April 29, four days before the May 3 examination.
The agency has reportedly claimed that 180 questions from the shared material were later found to be precisely identical to the actual NEET-UG 2026 question paper.
If proven, this would indicate that the material circulated before the examination was not merely a guess paper but had direct similarity with the actual exam paper.
Five Accused Sent to CBI Custody
The court granted seven-day CBI custody of five accused persons. They include:
- Yash Yadav from Gurugram
- Mangilal Khatik from Jaipur
- Vikash Biwal from Jaipur
- Dinesh Biwal from Jaipur
- Shubham Khairnar from Nashik
They were brought to Delhi on transit remand from their respective states.
Separately, the CBI has also arrested Dhananjay Lokhanda from Ahilyanagar and Manisha Waghmare from Pune.
Alleged Money Deal and Distribution Chain
According to the CBI, Khairnar allegedly informed Yash Yadav in April that Mangilal Khatik was willing to pay ₹10–12 lakh for leaked NEET-UG questions for his younger son.
The deal between Mangilal and Yash Yadav was reportedly fixed at ₹10 lakh, with a condition that around 150 questions from the question bank should match the actual NEET paper.
CBI has alleged that Mangilal received the papers, printed them, and distributed three printed sets to his son, relatives, and other candidates appearing for the examination.
The agency also claimed that Yash Yadav asked Vikash Biwal to find more candidates to recover the money spent on obtaining the leaked paper.
Raids Conducted, Digital Evidence Recovered
CBI has conducted raids at 14 locations in connection with the case. During these searches, the agency reportedly recovered:
- incriminating chats,
- leaked question papers,
- mobile phones,
- Telegram and WhatsApp communication,
- digital evidence,
- and other related material.
Some deleted data is expected to undergo forensic examination.
A CBI team also visited NTA headquarters in Delhi to collect documents related to the examination process.
Larger Conspiracy Under Investigation
The CBI has told the court that custodial interrogation is necessary to uncover the larger conspiracy. The agency is examining how far the leaked paper was distributed and whether more candidates, middlemen, officials, or printing-related persons were involved.
The investigation is also focusing on:
- the role of public servants,
- the possible role of printing press links,
- the Telegram circulation chain,
- money transactions,
- and the source inside or connected to NTA.
The agency has stated that several other suspects are being examined.
Defence Questions Arrest Procedure
The defence counsel opposed the CBI remand and argued that the arrests were illegal because the accused were allegedly not provided proper grounds of arrest. They also argued that custodial interrogation was not necessary.
However, the court granted custody to the CBI for further investigation.
Why This Case Matters
NEET-UG is one of India’s most important entrance examinations. It decides admission to MBBS, BDS, AYUSH, and other medical courses. Any compromise in the examination system affects lakhs of students and families.
This case raises major concerns about:
- examination security,
- question paper custody,
- digital leak networks,
- Telegram-based circulation,
- role of insiders,
- and the credibility of national-level entrance exams.
What Students Should Do Now
Students should avoid panic and focus only on official updates. They should:
- wait for the fresh NEET-UG 2026 schedule,
- follow NTA and official government channels,
- ignore unverified social media claims,
- continue preparation seriously,
- and keep all application details and documents ready.
Conclusion
The NEET-UG 2026 paper leak probe has now moved into a deeper and more serious phase, with the CBI telling the court that the leak may trace back to an alleged NTA insider.
The investigation is expected to focus on identifying the original source, the role of intermediaries, the digital circulation chain, and possible involvement of officials. For students and parents, the priority now should be to stay calm, prepare for the re-exam, and rely only on verified official information.