Maharashtra TET paper leak: MCOCA to be invoked against masterminds, says Dy CM Shinde
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Maharashtra Deputy Chief Minister Eknath Shinde on Saturday, 27 June 2026, announced that the state government intends to invoke the stringent Maharashtra Control of Organised Crime Act (MCOCA) against the masterminds and key accused in the Teacher Eligibility Test (TET) paper leak, calling the incident 'highly infuriating' and a form of structured, organised crime. The announcement came a day after a joint raid by Bhiwandi police exposed the leak, forcing the abrupt postponement of an exam that over 4.28 lakh candidates were set to appear for across 1,028 centres in Maharashtra.
What Shinde Said
Shinde stated he would hold a detailed discussion with Chief Minister Devendra Fadnavis to formalise the MCOCA invocation. He emphasised that the state government operates under a strict 'zero tolerance' policy on corruption and that a paper leak can no longer be treated as mere financial malpractice — it has evolved into organised crime.
'A thorough, impartial, and extremely strict investigation will be conducted. No one will be spared, regardless of their position or the syndicate they belong to,' Shinde asserted. He added that the strictest possible legal action would follow.
How the Leak Was Uncovered
According to official sources, intelligence agencies received confidential information in the early hours of Saturday, 27 June 2026, indicating that a group of individuals in Bhiwandi, Thane district, had gained unauthorised access to the TET question papers. Acting on that tip, police carried out timely raids that intercepted the leak before the exam, scheduled for Sunday, 28 June 2026.
Shinde commended the Maharashtra Police for their alertness, saying their swift intervention 'prevented the futures of lakhs of hardworking and honest aspirants from being plunged into darkness.'
Impact on Candidates
The Maharashtra State Council of Examinations (MSCE) abruptly postponed TET 2026, throwing the futures of over 4,28,122 registered candidates into uncertainty and sparking widespread outrage across the state. Council officials said the postponement was necessary to maintain absolute transparency and fairness.
Shinde reassured the affected student community that the exam would be rescheduled at the earliest and conducted in a 'completely transparent and fair manner,' with the rights of honest candidates protected.
Opposition Fires Back
Shiv Sena (UBT) leader and former minister Aaditya Thackeray trained his sights on the ruling Mahayuti alliance, questioning whether the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) was more focused on splitting parties and amending the Constitution than on stopping repeated paper leaks. He alleged the BJP 'had been ruining the future of the nation.'
Thackeray pointed to a pattern of examination breaches — referencing the NEET paper leak and past MPSC paper leaks — and argued that over the last decade such incidents had recurred repeatedly in Maharashtra, tarnishing the state's reputation. 'The country's youth deserve to dream about their future without having to protest every year,' he said.
What Happens Next
The state government is expected to finalise the MCOCA invocation after Shinde's meeting with Fadnavis. A fresh TET date is yet to be announced. The Mahayuti government has pledged to build what it describes as a 'corruption-free, high-quality, and robust education system' in Maharashtra — a commitment that will be tested by how swiftly and transparently the investigation proceeds.