About the Attorney General
The Attorney General's duties fall into three broad functions.
- Attorney General is the lawyer for the State of Ohio and its departments, boards and agencies. The Attorney General is responsible for the collection of debts owed to the state.
- The office has enforcement authority in areas as authorized by the General Assembly. These areas include consumer protection, charitable solicitation, antitrust actions and organized crime.
- The Attorney Generals office works with local law enforcement agencies at their request and provides criminal justice support services through the Bureau of Criminal Identification and Investigation, peace officer training through the Ohio Peace Officer Training Commission and task force participation through Ohio Organized Crime Investigations Commission. Occasionally, at the invitation of local prosecutors, attorneys with the Office will serve as special prosecutors in criminal cases.
The Stats
- The Office of Attorney General is comprised of nearly 1,300 employees, approximately 340 of whom are attorneys.
- In addition to the main office in Columbus, there are offices in Cincinnati, Toledo, and Cleveland.
- The office also includes the Ohio Peace Officers Training Academy and BCI in London, the Ohio Organized Crime Investigations Commission in Grove City, and BCI laboratories in Richfield and Bowling Green.
- At any given minute, more than 35,000 active legal cases are being handled by the people in the Attorney General's office, on issues ranging from consumer fraud and criminal justice to environmental enforcement and civil rights.