Was the Bengal school job case candidates' list manipulated to downplay crime proceeds?

Synopsis
Key Takeaways
- ED suspects manipulation of candidate list
- Reported number of 1,806 is questioned
- Actual number may exceed 6,000
- Concerns over transparency and accountability
- Legal figures demand further investigation
Kolkata, Sep 3 (NationPress) The Enforcement Directorate (ED) is investigating the cash-for-job scandal involving the West Bengal School Service Commission (WBSSC) and has raised suspicions that the list of compromised candidates published by the Commission was manipulated to show reduced crime proceeds.
The list, made public last week, indicated the total count of compromised candidates to be just 1,806, a number that has baffled many who have been part of the legal proceedings related to the cash-for-school-job case from its inception.
ED officials believe that the reported number of compromised candidates is significantly lower compared to the vast proceeds involved in the case, including sums already seized by the central investigative agency.
According to sources, there are doubts regarding the intentional release of this manipulated list, which seems aimed at establishing a narrative that fewer tainted candidates equate to lower proceeds from the alleged scam, thus minimizing the chain of beneficiaries.
However, sources also indicated that in the process of compiling this manipulated list, the planners overlooked the fact that the ED's investigation uncovered numerous other ineligible individuals who had paid large sums for unlawfully securing jobs, yet are absent from the Commission's published list.
Investigators believe that the ultimate goal behind publishing the manipulated list of compromised candidates will not be achieved.
Legal experts, including former Calcutta High Court judge and BJP Lok Sabha member Abhijit Gangopadhyay, along with CPI(M) Rajya Sabha member and senior advocate Bikas Ranjan Bhattacharya, have asserted that the list released by the Commission last week was manipulated, and more names are likely to emerge in the near future.
Both have suggested that the list of merely 1,806 compromised candidates, published last week, was designed to conceal rather than reveal the full extent of the scandal. They estimate the actual number of compromised candidates to be around 6,000 or perhaps even higher.