What does the attorney general actually do?
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What does the attorney general actually do?
As the chief officer of the Department of Justice, the attorney general enforces federal laws, provides legal counsel in federal cases, interprets the laws that govern executive departments, heads federal jails and penal institutions, and examines alleged violations of federal laws.
What is the difference between a United States attorney and a district attorney?
What is the difference between the U.S. Attorney’s Office and the District Attorney’s (D.A.’s) Office? The U.S. Attorney’s Office represents the United States in federal cases, including all federal criminal cases. The D.A.’s Office, by contrast, prosecutes state crimes rather than federal crimes.
Is a district attorney state or federal?
The District Attorney (DA) is a constitutionally elected county official. The District Attorney is responsible for the prosecution of criminal violations of state law and county ordinances occurring within a county under California Government Code Section 26500.
Why is it Attorney General instead of general attorney?
Why is it “Attorneys General” (plural) but not “Attorney’s General” (singular possessive)? With “Attorney General,” general modifies the noun attorney. Thus, when there is more than one Attorney General, you would write “Attorneys General.” This makes sense. You make the noun plural by adding an “s” to it.
Why do they say attorneys general instead of Attorney Generals?
Because “attorney” is the noun and “general” is the adjective. It’s common for legal phrases in English to use noun-adjective order instead of adjective-noun order.
What’s correct attorneys general or attorney-generals?
“General” here, though, is an adjective, not a noun; you can think of them as “general attorneys.” So the plural goes on the noun, and the proper form is “attorneys general.” Unless you’re British. Then you can call them “attorney-generals,” but don’t forget the hyphen.