The Attorney General's main office is located across the street from the State Capitol (the old Public Safety building), on the west side, in Montgomery. The address is:
Office of the Attorney General |
What does the Attorney General do?
The Attorney General is a constitutional officer whose duties and powers are set out in Title 36, Chapter 15, of the Code of Alabama (1975). As the State's attorney, he provides legal representation for the State of Alabama, its officers, departments, and agencies. The Attorney General defends the State in all lawsuits in which the State is named as a defendant. He represents the State in all court proceedings wherein the constitutionality of a state statute is challenged.
In addition to defending the State, the Attorney General may initiate court action, both civil and criminal, to protect the State's interests or to enforce State law. The Attorney General represents the State in all criminal actions in the appellate courts of the State of Alabama and in habeas corpus proceedings in the federal courts. He has the authority to superintend and direct the prosecution of any state criminal case.
The Attorney General issues legal advice in the form of formal or informal written opinions to authorized public officials and agencies.
History of the Attorney General's Office
The Office of the Attorney General of Alabama dates from 1807. In that year, the territorial legislature appointed an Attorney General for the Mississippi Territory, which included present day Alabama.
In 1818, the Territory was divided into three sections, Attorneys General were appointed for each section, and each received a salary of $450 per year. The following year Alabama gained statehood, and the Office of the Attorney General was included in the State Constitution. The Attorney General was to be elected by the Legislature to a four-year term. Since the 1876 State Constitution, the Attorney General has been elected by the people of Alabama.
The Office was classified under the judicial branch until 1868 when the Attorney General was made an executive officer of the state. Also in that year, the term of office was reduced to two years. The term was changed back to four years in 1901.
Alabama's Attorney General was allowed no clerical assistance until 1896 when the Attorney General was authorized to hire a clerk. Eleven years later, the first Assistant Attorney General was provided for with a salary of $1,500 per year. In 1911, another Assistant Attorney General was employed. In 1915, the Attorney General was given discretionary permission to hire as he felt necessary. The Attorney General also was given the ability to set the employee's salaries with the approval of the governor.
In 1939, the Alabama Merit System Act was passed and employees of the Attorney General's Office became subject to the Rules and Regulations of the State Personnel Board.
Today, the Attorney General's staff includes more than 150 employees with diversified skills and training in law, public administration, investigation, consumer affairs, utility regulation, secretarial science and other disciplines.
Updated from www.ago.state.al.us