The FBI Laboratory was founded on November 24, 1932. Despite the budget limitations during the
Great Depression, FBI director
J. Edgar Hoover invested in major equipment upgrades including ultraviolet lamps, microscopes,
moulage, and an extensive collection of tire treads, bullets, guns, and other materials that could assist local police in identifying crime scene evidence. From September 1934 to September 1975, the Lab was located on the 6th floor and the attic of the
Justice Department Building in Washington, D.C. Public tours of the lab work area were available until the FBI moved across the street to the newly constructed
J. Edgar Hoover Building in 1974. Tours of the J. Edgar Hoover Building were available, but the tour route shifted away from the lab work space, thus sealing the lab from public view. The Lab expanded to such an extent that the
Forensic Science Research and Training Center (FSRTC) was established at the
FBI Academy in
Quantico, Virginia. Methods at the FSRTC have helped establish standardized
forensic practices for law enforcement agencies. The FBI Lab has been in Quantico since the relocation from Washington since April 2003. , then the
FBI Director, showing actress
Shirley Temple a
microscope in the lab
Whistleblowing Dr.
Frederic Whitehurst, who joined the FBI in 1982 and served as a Supervisory Special Agent at the Lab from 1986 to 1998, blew the whistle on
scientific misconduct at the Lab. As a result of Whitehurst's
whistleblowing, the FBI Lab implemented forty major reforms, including undergoing an accreditation process. Reforms took place under FBI chief
Louis Freeh, who served from 1993 to 2001. Whitehurst's whistleblowing in the 1990s and the adverse publicity trials, in which FBI Lab employees were revealed as incompetent or disingenuous, led to major changes. According to John F. Kelly & Phillip K. Wearne's book
Tainting Evidence: Inside the Scandals at the FBI Crime Lab (1998), the Lab had been hurt by a lack of funding and an institutional entropy rooted in Lab employees' belief that they were the best forensic experts in the country, if not the world. Some Lab employees failed to keep abreast of developments in forensic science. The two authors concluded that the worst problem was that the Lab employees were FBI agents rather than pure forensic scientists. The investigative paradigm of the detective was antithetical to the investigative paradigm of the scientist. Lab employees began to work backwards, from a conclusion preordained by the prosecutors they served, and sought to justify that conclusion rather than using more scientific research methods. ==Projects==