State Pulls Plug on Northville Crime Lab After 50 Years

After five decades as a key crime lab for Metro Detroit, the Northville Forensic Science Laboratory is on its way out. Michigan State Police said Wednesday the 50-year-old facility will be shut down following a review that flagged the aging building and the cost of keeping it up to modern standards. Officials say the work and the people will be shifted to other state labs as the department builds up capacity elsewhere.

Northville Lab at a Glance

The Northville lab opened in 1976 and covers roughly 28,000 square feet. About 60 forensic staff members handle crime-scene response, DNA analysis, latent prints, seized drugs, and trace evidence. For decades, it has been a regional workhorse for Metro Detroit cases, according to Michigan State Police.

Why Officials Say It Is Closing

An internal assessment found that the building’s age and its systems would require significant investment, with repairs and maintenance projected at roughly $20 million over the next several years, as reported by The Detroit News. The governor’s FY-2027 budget recommendations already reflect the planned closure, listing a line-item reduction tied to consolidating laboratory capacity, according to state budget documents.

Col. James F. Grady II said the closure “will not result in the layoff of any staff or a reduction in any services,” and officials say Northville’s services and personnel will be shifted to other regional labs as capacity is added.

Where the Work Will Go

On official lab pages, the Metropolitan Detroit facility is listed at about 52,000 square feet, the Grand Rapids lab at roughly 115,000 square feet, and the Lansing lab at close to 83,000 square feet. State officials say Northville will stay open until a planned roughly 10,000-square-foot addition to the Detroit lab is complete so that transfers can be staged without service gaps.

Lawmakers and Prosecutors Push Back

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