AI-Generated Fake Cleanup and GPS Spoofing Cost Gurgaon Officials Their Jobs

Gurgaon's municipal corporation fired two Assistant Sanitary Inspectors for using AI to fabricate a cleanup photo and GPS spoofing to fake attendance. The cases reveal how consumer tech can undermine digital governance.

By Inside AI Editorial Team July 2, 2026
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July 2, 2026, (Inside AI) — The Municipal Corporation of Gurugram (MCG) fired two Assistant Sanitary Inspectors on July 1 after uncovering separate schemes that used artificial intelligence and GPS spoofing to fabricate work reports and attendance records. The terminations mark a rare disciplinary response to AI-enabled fraud in India’s public sector.

Commissioner Pradeep Dahiya signed orders citing “grave misconduct, fraud, dishonesty” and behavior unbecoming of public servants. Both employees were contractual hires through the Haryana Kaushal Rozgar Nigam Limited (HKRNL).

The first case involved Waseem, an Assistant Sanitary Inspector assigned to clear garbage from temple land in Kherki Daula Village after resident complaints. Instead of doing the work, he uploaded an AI-manipulated photograph on April 7 to the official grievance portal, depicting a spotless, uniformly paved area where none existed.

The order states:

“Waseem edited the original photographs through AI-based tools and uploaded such fabricated photographs on the official grievance portal with the intention of showing false compliance and obtaining closure of the complaint without carrying out the actual field work.”

During a personal hearing on July 1, Waseem admitted to the forgery. The MCG found he “deliberately uploaded AI-manipulated photographs on the grievance portal to falsely show that the complaint had been resolved, whereas the complaint remained unattended.”

The second case centered on Sonu, another Assistant Sanitary Inspector. A field inspection on April 9 found him absent from his duty location, yet the MCG’s Sanitation Monitoring System Portal showed him as present. When contacted by phone, he admitted he was at home.

An internal probe revealed Sonu used unauthorized third-party apps, including Fly GPS, to spoof his GPS location. The termination order notes:

“He was using unauthorised third-party applications, including Fly GPS, to spoof his GPS location, thereby bypassing the security features of the official attendance application of the Municipal Corporation and fraudulently marking his attendance while remaining absent from duty.”

Sonu also confessed during his hearing. The MCG deemed both employees’ written explanations “wholly unsatisfactory.”

The Rise of Low-Tech Deception in High-Tech Government

These cases expose a vulnerability in digitized public services: low-level workers can exploit accessible consumer AI and spoofing tools to undermine accountability. Generative AI image editing—once requiring Photoshop skills—is now trivial with mobile apps. Similarly, GPS spoofing apps are readily available and require no technical expertise.

India’s push for digital governance, including portals like the Centralised Public Grievance Redress and Monitoring System (CPGRAMS), assumes uploaded photos and GPS logs are truthful. The MCG incidents show that assumption is fragile. Without tamper-detection layers—such as image provenance standards or anomaly detection on location data—such fraud can go unnoticed.

This is not an isolated problem. In 2024, a NITI Aayog discussion paper flagged deepfakes and synthetic media as threats to administrative integrity. Globally, municipalities from New York to London have grappled with AI-generated fake evidence in permit applications and code enforcement.

Contractual Workers and Accountability Gaps

Both inspectors were contractual employees, a growing segment of India’s municipal workforce. The HKRNL model aims to provide flexible staffing, but critics argue it weakens oversight. A 2025 report by the Centre for Policy Research noted that contractual staff often lack training on digital ethics and face weaker disciplinary mechanisms than permanent employees.

The MCG’s swift termination signals a hardening stance, but the underlying system remains porous. The corporation has not disclosed whether it will implement technical safeguards—such as blockchain-anchored photo verification or liveness checks for attendance—to prevent recurrence.

For now, the two former inspectors face immediate dismissal. The MCG has forwarded the orders to HKRNL’s CEO, requesting official termination of their deployment. The message is clear: AI-enabled deception in public service will not be tolerated, even if the tools to commit it are just a download away.

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