Deccan Chronicle

Medical admission cons thriving in Hyd

Two aspirants from MP, Maha cheated of `35 lakh

- JAYENDRA T. CHAITHANYA | DC

Days after the Hyderabad police busted a Bihar-based gang which duped PG medical seat aspirants from the city, cops have found that new gangs have started their operations here to con MBBS aspirants hailing from other states.

In a span of one week, two incidents were reported from Madhapur of students belonging to Maharashtr­a and Madhya Pradesh being cheated by educationa­l consultanc­ies which took `29 lakh and `16 lakh from them. Police suspects that gangs from other states have started their operations in the city, as fake consultanc­ies run from Bihar and Delhi were busted and many others are under police vigil.

The fraudsters, who have secured the database of students who qualified in Neet, contacted the parents of the students and offered assistance to get admission into medical colleges. On August 31, Mr Ram Baboo Bhargava, a railway employee working in Thakur village near Mumbai, complained to the police about losing `29 lakh to fake consultant­s. In the first week of July, Mr Bhargava’s wife received a text message asking her to email her son’s educationa­l details to an employee of Eemerge Brain Strom India Pvt Ltd', to get assistance in securing an MBBS seat at a Bengaluru college. A week after responding, the couple was asked to visit the office at Madhapur along with their son.

Once there, the firm signed an agreement with the Bhargavas to provide a medical seat, and collected `9 lakh. Three weeks later, the firm asked Mr Bhargava to send `5 lakh, and another `15 lakh after a week. Mr Bhargava and his family visited the city again as directed by the consultant­s to attend counsellin­g at a private college, which they found to be a fraud.

A week before this, a complaint was received from a Bhopal-based businessma­n, who had deposited `16.25 lakh to get an MBBS admission for his cousin in the city. The fraudsters claiming to be the employee of 'Sak Sham Enlightmen­t and Services' at Madhapur made phone calls to the victim’s uncle offering assistance in getting the admission.

The student’s family was asked to visit the city to complete the process and made to pay `5.75 lakh.

They were taken to Bengaluru where the gang collected `4 lakh through electronic transfer and `6.5 lakh in cash. Days after that, the mobile phones used by the consultant­s became unreachabl­e and the family found that the admission process was a scam.

“The crooks have two branches at Hyderabad and Pune to cheat the gullible. The victim hailing from Mumbai came to the city to get admission for his son but got duped. We are verifying if new gangs have set up their operations in the city as many such fake consultanc­ies run in northern Indian states were busted. Efforts are on to nab the fraudsters based on the technical details,” said Madhapur inspector R. Kalinga Rao.

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