The Delhi High Court on Thursday issued notices to the National Testing Agency (NTA) and JEE (Advanced) on a plea seeking a probe into the alleged systemic lapses and discrepancies in the conduct of JEE (Main) 2025 exams..Justice Vikas Mahajan asked JEE to ensure that the petitioner, Shashank Shekhar Pandey, who alleged discrepancies in his marks, be registered for JEE (Advanced ). “It is further directed that the results of the petitioner may not be declared but placed before this court in a sealed cover. It is clarified that the interim directions in this case are subject to the outcome of this petition,” the Court said. It then listed the case for further consideration on July 25. .Pandey approached the High Court seeking a probe into the JEE (Main) 2025 exams, alleging that though he had answered a total of 46 questions, the response sheet uploaded by the NTA reflected only 29 attempted questions. When the Bench suggested that Pandey can take the exam next year, his counsel Shivam Pandey said this was his last chance since he has exhausted all his attempts. “I attempted 46 questions. Then, a response sheet came a few days later where it was stated that I attempted only 29 questions. It appears that they have jumbled these numbers. I am left with no remedy… This is my last attempt. I had gotten 90 percentile last year. I have prepared for the exam for four years. The deadline for registration ends tomorrow,” he said. Meanwhile, the NTA argued that there is no human interference in the exams and the whole process is done by the National Informatics Centre (NIC). Justice Mahajan said that the case cannot be resolved without looking at the audit logs, and he needs time to do that. .Advocates Shivam Pandey, Priyanshu Upadhyay, Shruti Pandey and Abhinav Sharma appeared for the candidate.