4 people were arrested across Uttar Pradesh on Sunday in connection with the police recruitment exam fraud, a senior official said.
Out of 24, nine were arrested by the state Special Task force (STF) and 15 were arrested by police of various districts, he said.
Eleven cases were registered, the official said, adding that the 24 people were arrested from Agra, Varanasi, Mathura, Lucknow, Ghazipur, Saharanpur, Kanpur and Firozabad.
The STF busted three gangs and arrested nine members from Agra, Mathura and Lucknow for allegedly assisting candidates in recruitment exam for police constable.
These gangs, one of which was using gadgets like blue-tooth earphones and web cameras, provided fraud candidates who wrote the offline recruitment exam 2018 for UP Police and PAC for aspirants. They would charge the aspirants between Rs. 5 lakh and Rs. 12 lakh, the STF said in a statement issued here.
One of the gangs, which allegedly assisted constable recruitment exam aspirants to use unfair means, was busted and its members were arrested in Agra, it said.
They also admitted that they used to charge Rs. 6-8 lakh from people to prepare fake exam-related documents, the STF said.
The kingpin along with two of his gang members was held from Mathura by the Noida field unit of the STF.
“Four sim card-based electronic communication devices, 22 bluetooth earphones, one web camera, marksheets and admit cards of 11 exam candidates and Rs. 15,000 were seized from their possession,” an STF officer said.
An SUV which was used by them was also impounded, the officer said. “The candidates sitting for the exam would read out the questions that would be transmitted through the devices fixed in their amulets to gang members outside the exam centres who would then feed them with correct answers,” the STF said.
According to the officials, the third gang was busted in Lucknow by the STF, which was carrying out an operation to target exam frauds on specific inputs about their involvement in police recruitment exams.
“They used to send fake candidates by tampering admit cards and would charge aspirants anywhere from Rs. 6 lakh to Rs. 12 lakh,” the STF said in a statement.