Answer (1 of 6): District attorneys are generally elected. Therefore they are supervised the way any other elected official is supervised, that is by the people who elected them through the process of electing a replacement. However, like any …
This figure is even higher if the district attorney has worked for more than 20 years. NOTE: There is a difference between a district attorney and an attorney general. While the district attorney is usually in charge of a small district, city or sometimes state, the attorney general is in charge of a state or entire country.
It’s on us–the public–to hold DAs accountable. We need to use our elections to demand that DAs take a different approach in the criminal justice system. However, in roughly the last 10 years in Oregon nearly 80% of district attorney elections were uncontested and roughly 40% of people who voted in elections decided not to cast a vote for ...
District attorneys (DAs) are more than just prosecutors. The district attorney’s job is to seek justice in criminal cases, work to prevent crime, and serve as a leader in the diverse communities they represent. The DA is also an elected official. In California, we have 58 elected DAs each representing one of our 58 counties.
A district attorney leads a staff of prosecutors, who are most commonly known as deputy district attorneys (DDAs). The deputy who serves as the supervisor of the office is often called the assistant district attorney, or chief deputy.
The DA has immense power in influencing an individual's decision to enter into a plea deal or to take their case to trial. More than 90 percent of all criminal cases end in a plea deal. The district attorney has the power to offer a sentence to the individual charged with a crime.
Full text1Prosecutors are the most powerful officials in the American criminal justice system. ... 2In this paper, I discuss the charging and plea-bargaining functions of the American prosecutor and how they operate to give prosecutors more control over the criminal justice system than any other criminal justice official.More items...
A DA has the power to investigate allegations of law enforcement misconduct and ultimately bring charges. A DA also has the power to ask a special prosecutor or another agency to investigate law enforcement misconduct.