Identity area
Type of entity
Corporate body
Authorized form of name
Department of the Attorney General
Parallel form(s) of name
Standardized form(s) of name according to other rules
Other form(s) of name
- Attorney General
- AG
Identifiers for corporate bodies
Description area
Dates of existence
1959-Present
History
Places
Legal status
Functions, occupations and activities
The Department of the Attorney General, established under section 26-7, HRS, is headed by the Attorney General. The Department administers and renders state legal services, including furnishing written legal opinions to the Governor, Legislature, and such state departments and officers as the Governor may direct; represents the State in all civil actions in which the State is a party; approves as to legality and form all documents relating to the acquisition of any land or interest in lands by the State; and unless otherwise provided by law, prosecutes cases involving violations of state laws and cases involving agreements, uniform laws, or other matters that are enforceable in the courts of the State.
Mandates/sources of authority
26-7, HRS
Internal structures/genealogy
The Department of the Attorney General is organized into Divisions:
Crime Prevention and Justice Assistance Division
The Crime Prevention and Justice Assistance Division coordinates crime prevention research projects and uniform crime statistic reports, administers federal and state grants relating to the improvement of criminal justice systems, coordinates crime prevention training activities, and develops and maintains the juvenile justice information system.
Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center
The Hawaii Criminal Justice Data Center, established under section 846-2, HRS, is responsible for the statewide criminal history record information system, statewide Automated Fingerprint Identification System, statewide Sex Offender and Other Covered Offender Registry, ( See chapter 846E, HRS.) and the Adult Criminal Information website (eCrim).
Investigation Division
The Investigation Division is responsible for providing investigative services in three general categories: criminal, civil, and administrative.
Child Support Enforcement Agency
The Child Support Enforcement Agency, created by section 576D-2, HRS, is responsible for administering the child support enforcement program, which involves establishing, collecting, and enforcing child support payments owed to children by their absent parents. In this connection, the Agency, through attorneys in the Department, files or appears in actions to establish paternity for children born out of wedlock; obtains, enforces, or modifies an order of support on behalf of any dependent or other person for whom the Agency has a duty to obtain or enforce an order of support; locates absent parents; and intercepts tax refunds of parents who are delinquent in making their child support payments.
Office of Child Support Hearings
The Office of Child Support Hearings is responsible for establishing, modifying, suspending, terminating, and enforcing child support obligations and providing a fair administrative hearing for child support disputes pursuant to chapters 91 (Administrative Procedure) and 576E (Administrative Process for Child Support Enforcement), HRS.
Legal Services Divisions
The various legal services divisions are responsible for providing legal services to the Governor, executive departments and agencies, the Legislature, and the Judiciary, and for enforcing laws. The divisions are organized according to the program areas they serve and include tort litigation, tax, labor, land/transportation, administration, civil recoveries, commerce and economic development/antitrust, special assignments, employment law, criminal justice, Medicaid fraud, health and human services, family law, education, public safety, Hawaiian home lands, and housing divisions.
Services provided by the divisions include furnishing written legal opinions, representing the State in all court and administrative agency actions, approving the legality and form of all contracts and documents relating to the acquisition of land or any interest in lands by the State, and prosecuting cases involving violations of state laws, agreements, and uniform laws.
ADVISORY BODY
Commission to Promote Uniform Legislation
The five-member Commission to Promote Uniform Legislation, established under sections 3-1 and 26-7, HRS, acts in an advisory capacity to the Attorney General and the Legislature on matters relating to the promotion of uniform legislation. Commissioners are appointed to four-year terms by the Governor with the advice and consent of the Senate; however, under section 26-7, HRS, the two-term, eight-year limit does not apply to members of the Commission.
The Commission works with the Uniform Law Commission (Formerly known as the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws) to promote uniformity of state laws in areas in which uniformity is practicable and desirable. The adoption by the states of the uniform acts prepared by the Uniform Law Commission is voluntary, and acts that would be advantageous to the State are promoted by the Commission for passage by the Legislature.
General context
Relationships area
Related entity
Identifier of the related entity
Category of the relationship
Type of relationship
Dates of the relationship
Description of relationship
Access points area
Subject access points
Place access points
Occupations
Control area
Authority record identifier
Maintained by
Institution identifier
Rules and/or conventions used
ISO 8601
Status
Level of detail
Dates of creation, revision and deletion
2021-08-31, Carol Kellett: completed authority record.
Language(s)
Script(s)
Sources
Guide to Government in Hawai‘i, 14th Edition.
Maintenance notes
2021-08-31, Carol Kellett: updated AtoM entry.