Fact Check
Pit of corruption: Site of Noida techie's death was under CBI investigation
The nexus between negligent builders and the Noida Authority runs deeper than the pit that engulfed techie Yuvraj Mehta.

Balkrishna leads the Fact Check Team at the India Today Group.
A broadcast journalist for more than 20 years, Balkrishna has been associated with the India Today Group for the past 18 years. He has covered the Prime Minister's Office (PMO) and reported from Parliament across the group's platforms. Political news remains his main forte. Balkrishna has also travelled extensively across the country and abroad covering a range of subjects, including foreign affairs, economy, data journalism, health, education, science & technology and environment.
He has covered national and Assembly elections. Balkrishna's professional experience ranges from covering a G-8 Summit in Japan to panchayat (local bodies) elections in Maoist-hit areas of Chhattisgarh. He has also headed the India Today bureau in Uttar Pradesh. Balkrishna is passionate about using Internet tools for investigative journalism and has an eye for detail. Besides work, he loves music, photography and travelling.
The nexus between negligent builders and the Noida Authority runs deeper than the pit that engulfed techie Yuvraj Mehta.
Under the pretext of purchasing leaked data in bulk for marketing, we spoke to 'Rakesh' at length. And among other things, he said he'd done no wrong in creating the ProxyEarth.org website.
The website ProxyEarth.org has a sleek, easy-to-use user interface. All you have to do is input an Indian mobile number.
According to a former colleague who spoke to India Today Fact Check on the condition of anonymity, Jawad became a Mechanical Engineering lecturer at Jamia Millia Islamia in 1993. But his ambitions far exceeded the humble podium of a college.
Before Faridabad, Dr Umar Un Nabi worked in a Jammu and Kashmir hospital. And was terminated.
Reporting neck-deep in flood waters - quite literally - this journo was not swept away, as was widely reported in India.
The PM's meetings and events on the ground have been widely covered. But what did his journey look like in the sky? What must Modi have seen from his window?
Even during a military conflict, one does not expect a top-ranking army officer in uniform to conduct an official press conference and present doctored clips to prove a point.
How the reporting of the Indo-Pak conflict by national and international news outlets was twisted by the Pakistani Army to further its narrative.
They emotionally exploit people using photos of children in critical condition. Posing as saviours, they collect donations for treatment. And then they pocket the money.