Delaware Attorney General: Office, Duties, and Legal Authority

The Delaware Attorney General serves as the chief law enforcement officer of the state, operating under constitutional authority distinct from both the Governor and the General Assembly. This page covers the office's statutory powers, operational responsibilities, jurisdictional scope, and the boundaries that separate the Attorney General's authority from federal prosecutors, private litigants, and other state agencies. It functions as a reference for legal professionals, researchers, and members of the public navigating Delaware's law enforcement and regulatory structure.

Definition and scope

The Office of the Attorney General is established by Article III, Section 1 of the Delaware Constitution, which designates the Attorney General as an independently elected executive officer. The position is not subordinate to the Delaware Governor's office — both are separately elected constitutional officers serving 4-year terms. This structural independence allows the Attorney General to pursue enforcement actions involving state agencies or executive branch conduct without a conflict of command authority.

The legal authority of the office derives from constitutional provisions, Title 29 of the Delaware Code (which governs state government), and the common law powers inherited from the English attorney general tradition. The Delaware Department of Justice (DOJ) is the operational body through which the Attorney General exercises these powers (Delaware Department of Justice).

The office is organized into 4 primary divisions:

  1. Criminal Division — Prosecution of felony and major misdemeanor cases across all 3 counties (New Castle, Kent, and Sussex)
  2. Civil Division — Representation of state agencies in litigation and legal counsel to government bodies
  3. Fraud and Consumer Protection Division — Enforcement of consumer protection statutes and investigation of fraud against residents and the state
  4. Family Division — Child abuse prosecution, domestic violence cases, and juvenile delinquency proceedings

Scope limitations: The office's authority covers state law enforcement and civil matters under Delaware statutes. Federal criminal matters — including violations of Title 18 of the U.S. Code — fall exclusively under the U.S. Attorney for the District of Delaware, a federal appointment operating within the Department of Justice. The Delaware Attorney General does not have jurisdiction over federal regulatory enforcement, immigration law, or matters governed solely by federal statute.

How it works

The Attorney General is elected statewide in the same general election cycle as the Governor, on a 4-year term with no term limits imposed by the Delaware Constitution. The office employs deputy attorneys general who carry prosecutorial and civil authority delegated by the chief officer.

In criminal matters, the office functions as the state's prosecutorial arm at the Superior Court level (felonies) and at the Court of Common Pleas (misdemeanors). The Delaware Superior Court handles the majority of serious criminal prosecutions brought by the DOJ. The Delaware Supreme Court hears appeals from those proceedings.

In civil enforcement, the Attorney General may initiate actions under the Delaware Consumer Fraud Act (6 Del. C. § 2513) and other consumer protection statutes. Civil penalty authority under these statutes allows the office to seek penalties of up to $10,000 per violation — a figure set by statute rather than administrative discretion (6 Del. C. § 2522).

The office also issues formal opinions to state agencies and elected officials on questions of statutory interpretation. These opinions carry persuasive, though not binding, legal authority — courts treat them as authoritative guidance rather than controlling precedent.

Common scenarios

The following scenarios represent the primary operational categories in which the Attorney General's authority is invoked:

Decision boundaries

The Attorney General's office and other enforcement bodies share overlapping jurisdictions in defined situations, and the boundaries operate as follows:

Attorney General vs. U.S. Attorney: The U.S. Attorney for the District of Delaware handles federal criminal prosecutions and may also bring parallel civil enforcement actions under federal law. Where conduct violates both state and federal statutes, both offices may proceed independently — dual sovereignty doctrine permits this without double jeopardy implications. Coordination agreements determine case assignment in practice.

Attorney General vs. private litigants: The office does not represent private citizens in personal civil disputes. A Delaware resident harmed by a business has a separate private right of action under consumer protection statutes; the Attorney General's enforcement action runs in the public interest, not on behalf of any individual complainant.

Attorney General vs. regulatory agencies: Agencies such as the Delaware Department of Insurance and the Delaware Department of Labor conduct their own administrative enforcement within their statutory mandates. The Attorney General may represent these agencies in court, but does not supplant their internal administrative authority.

Attorney General vs. county prosecutors: Delaware does not have a district attorney system. The Attorney General's office holds statewide prosecutorial jurisdiction — there are no elected county-level prosecutors. This contrasts with the structure in 46 other states, where county-level district attorneys handle felony prosecution independently. In Delaware, all felony prosecution runs through the DOJ, which maintains offices in Wilmington, Dover, and Georgetown.

The broader structure of Delaware's executive authority, including how the Attorney General interacts with other constitutional officers, is indexed at the Delaware Government Authority homepage.

References