NEW DELHI: Delhi Police’s crime branch has registered an FIR in connection with fraud during an exam related to the recruitment of fire operators.
Police said the complaint was filed by a deputy secretary rank official, and they have named three people as suspects in the case.
According to the complainant, they scrutinised the biometric reports taken during computer-based and driving skill tests for the post of fire operator, and then they learned about the fraud.
“They found the biometrics of three candidates that were taken during the CBT exam and driving skill tests were not matching each other,” police said.
During the inquiry, it was found that the photographs taken during the process of biometrics were different from the photographs pasted on the main applications.
The handwriting proforma that was recorded for the computer-based test and the driving skill test were not matching each other. The complainant suspected that fake candidates were appearing for the exams in place of original candidates.
“They indulged in unfair means, malpractices, and criminal activities like cheating, impersonation, forgery, and conspiracy during the exam,” the complainant told police.
Police said they suspect that fake candidates had appeared in three exam centres in place of the original candidates. A case under sections 419 (cheating by personation), 420 (cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of property), and 34 (acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the IPC.
Police said the complaint was filed by a deputy secretary rank official, and they have named three people as suspects in the case.
According to the complainant, they scrutinised the biometric reports taken during computer-based and driving skill tests for the post of fire operator, and then they learned about the fraud.
“They found the biometrics of three candidates that were taken during the CBT exam and driving skill tests were not matching each other,” police said.
During the inquiry, it was found that the photographs taken during the process of biometrics were different from the photographs pasted on the main applications.
The handwriting proforma that was recorded for the computer-based test and the driving skill test were not matching each other. The complainant suspected that fake candidates were appearing for the exams in place of original candidates.
“They indulged in unfair means, malpractices, and criminal activities like cheating, impersonation, forgery, and conspiracy during the exam,” the complainant told police.
Police said they suspect that fake candidates had appeared in three exam centres in place of the original candidates. A case under sections 419 (cheating by personation), 420 (cheating and dishonestly inducing delivery of property), and 34 (acts done by several persons in furtherance of common intention) of the IPC.