Police Arrest People for Test Cheating and Money Theft
Police Arrest People for Test Cheating and Money Theft
Introduction
The CBI police arrested people for two big crimes. One crime is about a school test. The other crime is about stealing money from other countries.
Main Body
Some people stole a big school test called NEET 2026. They sold the test papers to make money. The police arrested a man named Dhananjay. He and his friends used the Telegram app to send the papers. Also, the police arrested a man named Lakhan. He started a fake call center in India. His workers called people in the USA. They lied and said they were government officers. These workers stole 8.5 million dollars from people in the USA. The police found a lot of money and papers in a house in Noida.
Conclusion
The CBI police are still asking questions. They want to find more evidence and more criminals.
Learning
🕵️ Action Words (Past Time)
In this story, everything already happened. To talk about the past, we often add -ed to the end of the word.
- Arrest → Arrested
- Use → Used
- Start → Started
- Call → Called
Wait! Some words are 'rebels' and change completely. We call these irregular:
- Steal → Stole
- Find → Found
- Say → Said
💰 Money Words
Look at how we describe money in the text:
- Make money: To earn it.
- Steal money: To take it illegally.
- Million dollars: A very large amount (1,000,000).
📱 Tech & Tools
| Word | Meaning |
|---|---|
| App | A program on a phone |
| Call center | A place where people make many phone calls |
| Evidence | Proof that someone did something wrong |
Vocabulary Learning
CBI Arrests Suspects in Exam Leak and International Cyber-Fraud Cases
Introduction
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has strengthened its legal actions by arresting individuals involved in a national exam leak and a multi-million dollar international fraud operation.
Main Body
Regarding the NEET 2026 exam leak, a Delhi court has allowed the CBI to keep Dhananjay Nivrutti Lokhande in custody for six days. This decision was made because the agency needs to prevent the destruction of evidence and identify other members of the criminal group. The CBI emphasized that the exam materials were shared for money before the May 3 test date, which was confirmed by an initial investigation in Rajasthan. The materials were passed from Manisha Waghmare to Lokhande, then to Shubham Madhukar Khairnar, and finally to Yash Yadav, who used Telegram to distribute them. Financial records show that Lokhande paid Khairnar approximately 6 lakh rupees. Furthermore, the CBI arrested Lakhan Jaiprakash Jagwani on May 13 after he had been hiding. Jagwani is accused of being a main leader of an international cyber-fraud network that has operated since September 2022. This group set up illegal call centers in New Delhi and Noida, where workers pretended to be officials from US agencies like the FBI and the Social Security Administration. By using internet calling services and fake identities, the group cheated US citizens out of about 8.5 million dollars. Consequently, previous police actions in December 2025 led to the seizure of 1.88 crore rupees and important documents from a house in Greater Noida.
Conclusion
The CBI is continuing its interrogations and efforts to recover evidence in both the academic fraud and international financial crime cases.
Learning
🚀 The Leap: From 'Saying' to 'Reporting'
At the A2 level, you usually describe things simply: "The police arrested a man because he stole money." But to reach B2, you need to move toward Formal Reporting.
Look at how the article describes the crimes. It doesn't just use simple verbs; it uses Complex Cause-and-Effect structures.
⚡ The Power of "Because of" vs. "Due to" vs. "Consequently"
In the text, we see: "This decision was made because the agency needs to prevent..." and "Consequently, previous police actions... led to the seizure."
The B2 Upgrade: Instead of using "so" or "because" for everything, try these logical connectors to sound more professional:
-
Consequently / Therefore (Use these to start a sentence when showing a result).
- A2: He lied, so he went to jail.
- B2: He lied; consequently, he was arrested.
-
Involved in (Stop saying "did a crime").
- A2: He did a fraud operation.
- B2: He was involved in a fraud operation.
🔍 Vocabulary Shift: Precise Action Verbs
Notice the difference between basic words and the "B2 Power Verbs" used in the text:
| A2 Word | B2 Power Verb (from text) | Context Example |
|---|---|---|
| Stop | Prevent | ...to prevent the destruction of evidence. |
| Find | Identify | ...and identify other members. |
| Take | Seizure (Noun form) | ...led to the seizure of 1.88 crore rupees. |
| Ask/Question | Interrogation (Noun form) | The CBI is continuing its interrogations. |
Pro Tip: B2 speakers often turn verbs into nouns (Nominalization). Instead of saying "The police interrogated him," they say "The police conducted an interrogation." This makes your English sound academic and official.
Vocabulary Learning
Central Bureau of Investigation Executes Apprehensions in Examination Fraud and Transnational Cyber-Financial Schemes.
Introduction
The Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) has advanced its prosecutorial efforts through the detention of individuals implicated in a national academic examination leak and a multi-million dollar international fraudulent operation.
Main Body
Regarding the compromise of the NEET 2026 examination, a Delhi court has granted a six-day custodial remand for Dhananjay Nivrutti Lokhande. This judicial determination was predicated upon the necessity of neutralizing evidence tampering and the identification of additional conspirators within an organized syndicate. The CBI asserts that the examination materials were disseminated for pecuniary gain prior to the May 3 administration date, a claim corroborated by a preliminary inquiry conducted by the Rajasthan Special Operations Group. The operational chain of custody involved the transmission of materials from Manisha Waghmare to Lokhande, subsequently to Shubham Madhukar Khairnar, and finally to Yash Yadav, who utilized the Telegram application for distribution. Financial records indicate a transaction of approximately 6 lakh rupees between Lokhande and Khairnar. Parallelly, the CBI has secured the arrest of Lakhan Jaiprakash Jagwani on May 13, following a period of evasion. Jagwani is alleged to have been a primary architect of a transnational cyber-enabled financial fraud syndicate operational since September 2022. The mechanism of this enterprise involved the establishment of illicit call centers in New Delhi and Noida, where operatives impersonated officials from the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Drug Enforcement Administration, and the Social Security Administration. Through the deployment of VoIP communications and pseudonymous identities, the syndicate defrauded United States nationals of an estimated 8.5 million dollars. Prior enforcement actions in December 2025 resulted in the seizure of 1.88 crore rupees and pertinent documentation from a residence in Greater Noida.
Conclusion
The CBI continues to expand its custodial interrogations and evidence recovery processes across both the academic integrity and transnational financial crime sectors.
Learning
The Architecture of 'Institutional Nominalization'
To bridge the gap from B2 to C2, a student must move beyond describing actions and begin encoding concepts. This text is a masterclass in Nominalization—the process of turning verbs (actions) into nouns (entities). In high-level legal and administrative English, this is not merely a stylistic choice; it is a tool for precision, objectivity, and the creation of 'formal distance'.
⚡ The Shift: Action Concept
Observe how the author avoids simple subject-verb-object patterns in favor of complex noun phrases:
- B2 Approach: "The court decided to keep him in custody because they needed to stop him from destroying evidence."
- C2 Approach: "This judicial determination was predicated upon the necessity of neutralizing evidence tampering."
Analysis: The action deciding becomes a determination. The action preventing becomes the necessity of neutralizing. This transforms a narrative of events into a statement of legal fact.
🛠️ Linguistic Deconstruction: The 'Heavy' Noun Phrase
C2 mastery requires the ability to stack modifiers and nouns to create a single, dense unit of meaning. Look at this specimen:
*"...a transnational cyber-enabled financial fraud syndicate..."
Instead of saying "a group that used the internet to commit fraud across different countries," the author compresses four distinct concepts into one compound adjective-noun cluster. This allows the writer to maintain a high information density.
🎓 Application: The 'Formalist' Lexicon
To replicate this level of sophistication, replace common verbs with their nominal counterparts coupled with 'stative' verbs (be, remain, consist of):
| Common Verb | Nominalized form | C2 Implementation |
|---|---|---|
| To leak | Leakage / Compromise | "The compromise of the examination..." |
| To gain money | Pecuniary gain | "...disseminated for pecuniary gain..." |
| To evade | Evasion | "...following a period of evasion." |
| To use | Deployment | "Through the deployment of VoIP..." |
The C2 Takeaway: Stop telling the reader what happened. Start describing the phenomena that occurred. When you shift from verbs to nouns, you shift from storytelling to scholarly reporting.