KGMU Lucknow Imposter Arrested: Fake Doctor Built Ties With 20+ Hindu Female Students
The massive vulnerability of security within India’s top medical campuses has been shockingly exposed. A 26-year-old man, whose educational qualification is only up to Class 12, was arrested this week for successfully posing as a resident doctor at King George’s Medical University (KGMU) in Lucknow for an extended period.
Caught by Alert MBBS Students
The accused, identified as Hassam Ahmad, was finally apprehended on Tuesday, April 21, by alert MBBS students inside the KGMU campus. The students grew highly suspicious of his activities near the surgery department and confronted him. He was subsequently handed over to the KGMU administration and the Chowk Police.
Operating under the guise of a fictitious trust named “Cardio Seva Sansthan,” Ahmad routinely wore a doctor’s apron and stethoscope, establishing a vast network within the hospital. He primarily extorted money from highly vulnerable patients and their attendants under the pretext of facilitating rapid medical treatment and hospital beds.
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Forged Documents and AIIMS Delhi Trap
During the police investigation on Wednesday, April 22, it was revealed that the imposter had heavily forged official university documents. He notoriously faked the signature of Dr. K.K. Singh, Dean of Paramedical Sciences, to issue a fabricated notice inviting the 2023 MBBS batch to a “medical conference” at AIIMS Delhi on April 29.
Police Probe Conversion Racket Angle
Mainstream media reports, including statements by DCP (West Zone) Kamlesh Dixit, confirmed that the police are investigating a much darker, organized criminal conspiracy. According to the police, Ahmad specifically targeted and built personal ties with nearly 20 Hindu female medical students from KGMU and two other local colleges.
Investigators suspect the fake AIIMS conference letters were a direct trap to lure these female medicos to Delhi or other locations. Authorities are actively probing the case as a religious conversion racket (widely reported in the media as a ‘Love Jihad’ angle) alongside charges of cheating, impersonation, and criminal forgery under the Bharatiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS).
The incident has triggered massive outrage among resident doctors regarding how an unverified civilian could freely roam the wards, interact with female students, and extort patients right under the administration’s nose.

