The surrogate students are only the latest symptom of an epidemic of corruption that has g
"In our school alone this spring we caught four impostors who were attempting to sit the entrance tests in place of others," said Grigory Kantorovich, deputy head of the HSE. "Those were not isolated cases; it's a whole, specialised business."
Such corruption is multiplied by a burgeoning market in coursework and diplomas written by teachers and lecturers, which can be bought over the Internet.
A police spokesman said there was no dedicated unit for tackling corruption in education, but individual cases were investigated if evidence was handed over.