Pacga.org is Prosecuting Attorneys Council of Georgia

Title

Prosecuting Attorneys' Council of Georgia - Welcome!

Description

The office of District Attorney in Georgia dates to the division of the colonial office of Attorney General into an Attorney General and a Solicitor-General in 1789. It is the only local prosecutor's position in the United States whose origins can be traced directly to those English common law offices. As additional Judicial Circuits were created, additional Solicitors General positions were created in the new circuits. In 1968, the title Solicitor-General was changed to District Attorney and the office became a full-time position whose incumbent could not engage in the private practice of law.

The District Attorney is the chief prosecuting officer for the State of Georgia within each of the State's 48 judicial circuits. Judicial circuits consist of one to eight counties and are generally named for a geographical feature within the Circuit.

Each District Attorney is an elected constitutional officer, who is part of the judicial branch of Georgia state government. The District Attorney represents the State of Georgia in the trial and appeal of felony criminal cases in the Superior Court for the judicial circuit and delinquency cases in the juvenile courts. The District Attorney is also the legal advisor to the grand jury and performs other duties prescribed by law.

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