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Friday, July 10, 2026

Prime suspect in Khan Sir coaching center attack found dead under mysterious circumstances in Nepal

Date:

TBM Report

Prince Yadav, the prime accused in the violent bomb attack and vandalism at the ‘Khan Global Studies’ center in Patna, Bihar, has been found dead under suspicious circumstances in eastern Nepal. Nepalese tactical units recovered Yadav’s body from a hotel room in Biratnagar on Sunday, just a day after he checked in with his associates. The Nepal Police Command has detained five of his close companions from the premises for intensive interrogation regarding the timeline of events.

The death marks a volatile turn in the multi-million rupee “coaching center turf war” of Patna. Prince Yadav and his elder brother, Roshan Anand, co-owners of the rival ‘Gyan Bindu’ coaching institute, were booked by Bihar Police on June 2 for orchestrating a coordinated assault involving crude bombs against Faisal Khan, popularly known across India as ‘Khan Sir’. While Roshan Anand was immediately apprehended, Prince Yadav had crossed the porous international border into Nepal to evade a state-wide manhunt.

According to preliminary forensic evaluations released by the Biratnagar Police, while Yadav was heavily intoxicated at the time of death, distinct trauma and laceration marks were observed around his eyes and facial region. “We are not ruling out homicide or foul play. The crime scene has been cordoned off, and the body has been transferred for a comprehensive forensic autopsy to ascertain the exact mechanism of death,” a senior Nepalese investigator stated. Back in Patna, the Bihar Police has reinforced anti-riot deployments across the coaching sectors to prevent reprisal violence.

Faisal Khan’s ‘Khan Global Studies’ revolutionized the Indian competitive exam sector by offering UPSC and Civil Services training for a fraction of the market rate—charging 7,500 to 15,000 INR compared to the standard corporate fee of 200,000 INR. This aggressive pricing model triggered deep professional animosity with traditional institutes like Gyan Bindu. The conflict escalated into open warfare on June 2 over marketing rights for successful police constable candidates. With Khan Sir currently out on interim bail and the prime accused dead in a foreign jurisdiction, the geopolitical and legal matrix of the investigation has significantly complicated for both nations.

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