National Forensic Service
The National Forensic Service is a South Korean government agency under the Ministry of the Interior and Safety which conducts forensic examinations and research. Established in 1955, the NFS oversees the majority of forensic analysis in criminal cases in South Korea. It is currently headquartered in Wonju, Gangwon Province.
History
The National Forensic Service was established on March 25, 1955, under the Ministry of Home Affairs, to specialize in medicinal and physicochemical forensics outside of fingerprint analysis.Originally an auxiliary agency, the NFS expanded in scope and size upon playing key forensic roles in major criminal cases. Most notably, in May 1965, NFS investigators revealed that multiple South Korean pharmaceutical companies were illegally dosing their products with the synthetic opioid methadone.
DNA profiling in South Korea began in the 1990s with the establishment of the NFS's DNA analysis center in 1991. Genetic analysis was extensively used by the NFS to identify the victims of the 1995 Sampoong Department Store collapse, and later Lee Choon-jae, the perpetrator of the Hwaseong serial murders.
The NFS relocated its headquarters to Wonju, Gangwon Province, in 2013, with its previous headquarters in Seoul now becoming the agency's Seoul Institute.