Chandrapur Police in Maharashtra uncovered an international kidney transplant racket after a marginal farmer's video went viral last month. The video, by Roshan Kude, exposed how he sold a kidney to repay a ₹1 lakh loan that ballooned to ₹70 lakh due to interest. Investigations revealed poor youths were lured to sell kidneys and some were taken to Cambodia for illegal transplants. So far, eight people have been arrested, including six moneylenders and two agents. Two doctors, accused of running the racket, are from Tiruchi and Delhi. Dr. Ravinder Pal Singh from Delhi was arrested but later granted bail. He must appear before the Chief Judicial Magistrate in Chandrapur on January 2, 2026. Dr. Rajratnam Govindaswamy from STAR KIMS Hospital, Tiruchi, is still absconding. Police stated that after selling their own kidneys, agents Himanshu Bharadwaj and Krishna lured others into the racket. Victims were taken to locations in India like Delhi and Tiruchi, or abroad to Cambodia for kidney removal. Investigations revealed a pan-India network involving agents, donors, doctors, and hospitals. The kidney sellers were exploited heavily. While receivers paid ₹50 lakhs to ₹80 lakhs per kidney transplant, sellers got only 10% of that—around ₹5 to ₹8 lakhs. Dr. Ravinder received about ₹10 lakhs, Dr. Rajratnam charged ₹20 lakhs, and agents Krishna and Himanshu collected nearly ₹20 lakhs. The police continue to search for the absconding doctor and crackdown on the racket after raids and data analysis exposed the wide-reaching network.