A cunning plot to infiltrate Indian Railways as a technician collapsed spectacularly in Bihar when advanced biometrics caught the fraudsters red-handed. Mukesh Kumar from Munger lacked confidence in clearing the 2024 recruitment drive, so he paid neighbor Ranjit Kumar Rs 6 lakh to impersonate him during exams.
Their masterstroke? A sophisticated hybrid photograph blending Mukesh’s and Ranjit’s facial traits via Google searches and photo editors. This ‘perfect’ image justified the selection process, from CBT in Patna to medicals in Bhopal. Mukesh reported for duty across multiple zones—Damoh, Sagar, Jabalpur—and progressed to training in Prayagraj.
The downfall came during a routine biometric check on November 14, 2025. The fingerprints and face scan clashed with the original applicant data, exposing the switch. Mukesh bolted to Bihar, but CBI swiftly apprehended him in Munger and nabbed Ranjit on his tip-off.
As probes deepen into potential repeat offenses by Ranjit, the case highlights biometrics’ role as a fraud deterrent. Aadhaar updates are flexible—addresses online or at centers for Rs 100, photos via live biometrics—but verification always demands matching scans, sealing the gap between real and fake identities.