Trusted Source Image

Delhi Police arrests six people for running bogus education centre

Press Trust of India | August 24, 2022 | 05:43 PM IST | 1 min read

Mountain Institute of Management and Technology at Kilokari village in Sunlight Colony, used to issue fake marksheets and certificates for graduation courses.

Representational Image: Shutterstock
Representational Image: Shutterstock

NEW DELHI: The Delhi Police on Wednesday said it has arrested six people from Southeast Delhi for allegedly running a bogus education centre and giving fake marksheets and degrees to "students". Two of the accused Rehan (25) and Kaif (27) owned the institute named 'Mountain Institute of Management and Technology' at Kilokari village in Sunlight Colony, under which they used to issue fake marksheets and certificates for graduation courses without the students having to appear for exams.

They used to charge Rs 10,000 to Rs 20,000 per person, a senior police officer said. The others arrested are Rekha (26), Poonam (22), Deepika (22) and Amita (22). Explaining their modus operandi, Deputy Commissioner of Police (Southeast) Esha Pandey said they used to obtain data of prospective targets from a job portal and then assure them of providing backdated certificates of graduation courses without them having to appear in any exam. "The payment was being received through UPI and other online modes. After receiving the payment, they used to provide fake degrees of recognised universities to the candidate, whose record would never get updated in the respective varsities," she said.

Also read | ‘21st century is for biology’: Why many engineers build careers in life sciences

The arrests were made based on a tip-off received on July 13. Six mobile phones, a laptop, printer, seals, fabricated marksheets, degree certificates, a record register and payment slips were recovered from their possession, police said. The arrested have been booked under Sections 419 (cheating by personation), 420 (cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of property), 120 (concealing design to commit offence punishable with impris­onment) and 34 (common intention) of the Indian Penal Code, they said. Investigation is underway to extract data of beneficiary candidates and alleged transactions, which runs into several lakh of rupees, they said.

MakeCAREERS360
My Trusted Source
Trusted Source ImageAdd as a preferred source on google

Follow us for the latest education news on colleges and universities, admission, courses, exams, research, education policies, study abroad and more..

To get in touch, write to us at news@careers360.com.

Download Our App

Start you preparation journey for JEE / NEET for free today with our APP

  • Students300M+Students
  • College36,000+Colleges
  • Exams550+Exams
  • Ebooks1500+Ebooks
  • Certification16000+Certifications