Police caught a man in India who acted as a British heart doctor. He did operations that killed seven people. The faker, Narendra Yadav, called himself "Dr N John Camm" and worked at a religious hospital. Officers claim he made up his medical papers and stole the name of a famous UK doctor. Yadav says he did nothing wrong and wants money from people who called him fake.
Just before cops grabbed him, Yadav asked for 50 million rupees from two dozen people who said bad things about him. The hospital where he cut into hearts claims they never knew he lacked real training. "He seemed like a real professor and did his job well," someone from the hospital told a newspaper. Nobody doubted his skills until children's officials noticed something fishy.
A local child group first raised alarms when patients started dying. "We checked his background online and found trouble cases in three states," said Deepak Tiwari from the child group. When people started asking questions, Yadav left his job and ran away without telling anyone why. Police finally found him Monday night in Prayagraj city.
Police chief Somvanshi said, "This fake doctor worked on 64 cases and did 45 heart tube fixes that killed seven patients." His papers look real but lack key details like student numbers. This marks just one chapter in his long, fake career. Back in 2019, Yadav wrote online that he trained under the real Dr Camm in England and worked all over the world.
He even claimed he planned a huge 5,000-bed hospital in western India. Records show he started four companies in England, first as Narendra Yadav, then changed his name to include "John Camm." Last year, a fact-checker caught him making a fake social media account. The real Dr. Camm had to tell people someone stole his name. Yadav faced many legal problems before—he once kidnapped a British doctor, lost his right to practice medicine for five years, and faced fraud charges in 2013.
Just before cops grabbed him, Yadav asked for 50 million rupees from two dozen people who said bad things about him. The hospital where he cut into hearts claims they never knew he lacked real training. "He seemed like a real professor and did his job well," someone from the hospital told a newspaper. Nobody doubted his skills until children's officials noticed something fishy.
A local child group first raised alarms when patients started dying. "We checked his background online and found trouble cases in three states," said Deepak Tiwari from the child group. When people started asking questions, Yadav left his job and ran away without telling anyone why. Police finally found him Monday night in Prayagraj city.
Police chief Somvanshi said, "This fake doctor worked on 64 cases and did 45 heart tube fixes that killed seven patients." His papers look real but lack key details like student numbers. This marks just one chapter in his long, fake career. Back in 2019, Yadav wrote online that he trained under the real Dr Camm in England and worked all over the world.
He even claimed he planned a huge 5,000-bed hospital in western India. Records show he started four companies in England, first as Narendra Yadav, then changed his name to include "John Camm." Last year, a fact-checker caught him making a fake social media account. The real Dr. Camm had to tell people someone stole his name. Yadav faced many legal problems before—he once kidnapped a British doctor, lost his right to practice medicine for five years, and faced fraud charges in 2013.