An investigative analysis published on June 7, 2026 by Indian Express has documented 45 major examination paper leaks across India over the past 24 years from 2002 to 2026, revealing a stark pattern: while millions of students have paid the price through lost years, cancelled exams, and emotional distress, the number of senior officials and systemic architects who have faced meaningful legal or career consequences remains critically low.
This analysis comes in the context of the NEET UG 2026 paper leak, which is the largest single examination cancellation in Indian history affecting approximately 22.79 lakh students and triggering a CBI probe with 13 arrests so far.

Major Paper Leaks Documented in 24 Years
| Time Period | Notable Leaks |
|---|---|
| 2002 to 2010 | State PSC exams, SSC multiple instances, railway recruitment boards |
| 2010 to 2018 | UPSSSC, state police recruitment, multiple state board exams |
| 2018 to 2024 | UPSC CAPF, RPSC RAS, Bihar BPSC, CTET, NTA UGC NET 2024 |
| 2026 | NEET UG 2026 (largest single cancellation) |
What Accountability Has Looked Like
- Most paper leaks resulted in exam cancellation and rescheduling but no structural reform
- Junior-level government clerks and printing staff are most commonly arrested and charged
- No NTA Director General has faced criminal prosecution in any leak case
- Transfer, not termination has been the standard official response
- Only a handful of cases have seen IAS officers or examination controllers face serious judicial proceedings
The NEET 2026 Difference
The NEET 2026 case stands out because:
- It triggered the first confirmed Supreme Court scrutiny of whether NTA should be dissolved
- Led to the largest ever student protest movement in the education sector (Cockroach Janta Party — 22 million followers)
- PM of India personally monitoring the re-exam security
- IAF aircraft being considered for paper transport
Congress MP Demand for White Paper
Congress leader Digvijaya Singh wrote to Prime Minister Narendra Modi demanding a White Paper on all paper leaks in India over the past 24 years with a complete accountability audit. Singh linked this to the NEET 2026 re-exam scheduled for June 21, saying students deserve to know the full scale of institutional failure.









