BHOPAL: The TOI report on suspicious deaths of nearly 40 racketeers has opened a can of worms. Whistle-blowers have demanded an inquiry into the death of another medical student, who died under mysterious circumstances on January 15 this year after being booked in the scam earlier in the month.Ramendra Singh Bhadoria, 30, was found hanging at his home in Gwalior a few days after an FIR was registered. His family members claimed he was being mentally tortured by those involved in the MPPEB scam to keep quiet. His mother also committed suicide by consuming acid a week later.While Gwalior police claim Ramendra committed suicide after a failed love affair, MPPEB whistle-blowers claim Ramendra was under pressure from scamsters. Ramendra's death has snapped further links to the scam. His name doesn't figure in the list submitted to the high court-appointed SIT monitoring MPPEB scam probe.He was a 2007 batch student of Gajra Raja Medical College, Gwalior. A four-member committee of the college found him guilty of using unfair means to clear pre-medical examination (PMT) in 2009 and recommended his termination.The matter was kept on the backburner till the Special Task Force (STF) began investigations in 2012. Ramendra was booked along with 16 other students under various sections for impersonation and forgery. According to Gwalior-based whistle-blower Ashish Chaturvedi, Ramendra was impersonated in the exam by an unknown medical student."No one knows how Ramendra got entangled in the MPPEB scam net. Ramendra's death has buried secrets on how he arranged his proxy and mediated the deal," said Ashish Chaturvedi, a key complainant in the scam."CBI should probe every death. It may be possible that students committed suicide for some other reason. But that doesn't mean his links to the scam should not be examined. There could be a larger conspiracy," he said.