Prosecutor General of Ukraine
The Prosecutor General of Ukraine heads the system of official prosecution in courts known as the Office of the Prosecutor General of Ukraine. In 1991 the post was inherited from the socialist law state. The term of authority of the Prosecutor is six years. She or he is appointed and dismissed by the president with parliamentary consent. Parliament can force the Prosecutor General to resign after a vote of no-confidence.
The current Prosecutor General is since 17 March 2020 Iryna Venediktova.
There are seven more additional deputies to the Prosecutor General. The Prosecution General Office is a state institution that is directly proscribed in the Constitution of Ukraine along with the Cabinet of Ukraine, Verkhovna Rada, President of Ukraine.
Since its establishment in 1917/18 the Prosecutor General Office of Ukraine was subordinated to the Government of Ukraine, while the Prosecutor General holding the post of the Minister of Justice. In 1922 it was reorganized under socialist law after the Soviet occupation of Ukraine. With adaptation of the Stalin's Constitution of 1936/37, the office's subordination changed and, instead of subordinating to the government of Ukraine, it was subordinated to the Prosecutor General Office of the Soviet Union directly. The status of the office was lowered and no longer holding any posts in the government of the union republic. With dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Prosecutor General Office of Ukraine exists as an independent agency.
Definition
The Office of the Prosecutor General is entrusted with:- prosecution in court on behalf of the State;
- representation of the interests of a citizen or of the State in court in cases determined by law;
- supervision of the observance of laws by bodies that conduct detective and search activity, inquiry and pre-trial investigation;
- supervision of the observance of laws in the execution of judicial decisions in criminal cases, and also in the application of other measures of coercion related to the restraint of personal liberty of citizens.
Duties and powers
Both in theory and in practice, the Prosecutor General and their office wield considerable power. This is a legacy of the Soviet Union state prosecutor’s office founded in 1937 of which the current Prosecutor General office is the successor. After Ukraine's independence in 1991 many of the Prosecutor General office functions were expanded. In 2016 the powers of the Prosecutor General office were decreased and limited to:- Organization and leadership of pre-trial investigations;
- Support of public prosecution in the courts; and
- Representation of the state’s interest in the courts, according to the law.
The Prosecutor General creates a collegiate council consisting out of the Prosecutor General, their first and other deputies, the Prosecutor of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, and other leaders of prosecution agencies.
The independent agency General Inspectorate oversees "the legality of actions undertaken by prosecutors and investigators of the whole prosecution system".
Structure
- Prosecutor's Office of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea
- Prosecutor's Office of Cherkasy Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Chernihiv Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Chernivtsi Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Dnipropetrovsk Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Donetsk Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Ivano-Frankivsk Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Kharkiv Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Kherson Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Khmelnytskyi Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Kirovohrad Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Kyiv City
- Prosecutor's Office of Kyiv Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Luhansk Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Lviv Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Mykolaiv Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Odesa Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Poltava Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Rivne Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Sumy Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Ternopil Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Vinnytsia Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Volyn Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Zakarpattia Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Zaporizhia Oblast
- Prosecutor's Office of Zhytomyr Oblast
- Military Prosecutor's Office of Joint Forces
- Military Prosecutor's Office of Ukrainian Central Region
- Military Prosecutor's Office of Ukrainian Southern Region
- Military Prosecutor's Office of Ukrainian Western Region
- National Academy of Prosecution of Ukraine
Separate organizations
- Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office
- Military Prosecutor
- General Inspection
- Primary Trade Union Organization of the Prosecutor General Office of Ukraine employees
Leadership
- Prosecutor General – Iryna Venediktova
- Deputy Prosecutor General – Viktor Trepak
- Deputy Prosecutor General – Günduz Mamedov
- Deputy Prosecutor General—Director of Specialized Anti-Corruption Prosecutor's Office – Nazar Kholodnytskyi
History
Early period
The post of Prosecutor General appeared back in 1917. After Ukrainian declared its independence from the Russian Republic due to the Bolshevik's aggression, the post was held by the minister of justice.# | Term | Name |
x | 1917 — 1918 | Dmytro Markovych |
1 | Serhiy Shelukhin | |
x | Mykhailo Chubynskyi | |
x | Oleksiy Romanov | |
2 | Andriy Viazlov | |
3 | Viktor Reinbot |
Soviet period
After the occupation of Ukraine by Bolsheviks in June of 1922 there was established the Prosecutor's Office of the Ukrainian SSR. In the early years of the Ukrainian SSR, the office of Prosecutor General was merged with the Minister of Justice until spring 1936. From 1937 to 1991 the republican prosecution office of Ukraine was subordinated to the Prosecutor General of the USSR. Until 1937 the Prosecutor General of Ukraine was appointed by the higher bodies of state power of Ukraine.# | Term | Name | Official title |
1 | 1922 — 1927 | Mykola Skrypnyk | Procurator General |
2 | 1927 — 1930 | Vasyl Poraiko | Procurator General |
3 | 1930 — 1933 | Vasiliy Polyakov | Procurator General |
4 | 1933 — 1935 | Mikhail Mikhailik | Procurator General |
5 | 1935 — 1936 | Arkadiy Kiselyov | Procurator General |
6 | 1936 | Grigoriy Zhelyeznogorskiy | Procurator General |
7 | 1938 — 1944 | Leonid Yachenin | Procurator |
8 | 1944 — 1953 | Roman Rudenko | Procurator |
9 | 1953 — 1963 | Denys Panasyuk | Procurator |
10 | 1963 — 1983 | Fedir Hlukh | Procurator |
11 | 1983 — 1990 | Petro Osypenko | Procurator |
List of Prosecutors General
This list shows prosecutors of independent Ukraine. In the absence of the Prosecutor General, the office is headed by their First Deputy as the acting Prosecutor General.Prior to January 2017 the term of authority of the Prosecutor was five years. Since January 2017 this was increased to six years.
# | Prosecutor General of Ukraine | Name |
1 | September 4, 1991 — October 21, 1993 | ' |
2 | October 21, 1993 — October 19, 1995 | Vladyslav Datsiuk |
3 | October 19, 1995 — July 22, 1997 | Hryhoriy Vorsinov |
act | July 22, 1997 — April 24, 1998 | Oleh Lytvak |
act | April 24, 1998 — July 17, 1998 | Bohdan Ferents |
4 | July 17, 1998 — April 30, 2002 | Mykhailo Potebenko |
April 30, 2002 — July 6, 2002 | unknown | |
5 | July 6, 2002 — October 29, 2003 | Sviatoslav Piskun |
October 29, 2003 — November 18, 2003 | unknown | |
6 | November 18, 2003 — December 9, 2004 | Hennadiy Vasylyev |
7 | December 10, 2004 — October 14, 2005 | Sviatoslav Piskun |
October 14, 2005 — November 4, 2005 | unknown | |
8 | November 4, 2005 — April 26, 2007 | Oleksandr Medvedko |
9 | April 26, 2007 — May 24, 2007 | Sviatoslav Piskun |
act | May 24, 2007 — June 1, 2007 | Viktor Shemchuk |
10 | June 1, 2007 — November 3, 2010 | Oleksandr Medvedko |
11 | November 4, 2010 — February 22, 2014 | Viktor Pshonka |
comm | February 22, 2014 — February 24, 2014 | Oleh Makhnitsky |
act | February 24, 2014 — June 18, 2014 | Oleh Makhnitsky |
12 | June 19, 2014 — February 11, 2015 | Vitaly Yarema |
13 | February 11, 2015 — March 29, 2016 | Viktor Shokin |
act | March 29, 2016 — 12 May 2016 | Yuriy Sevruk |
14 | May 12, 2016 — August 29, 2019 | Yuriy Lutsenko |
15 | August 29, 2019 — March 5, 2020 | Ruslan Riaboshapka |
act | March 6, 2020 – March 17, 2020 | Viktor Chumak |
16 | March 17, 2020 – present | Iryna Venediktova |
Legend:
- act — acting
- comm — Parliamentary commissioner
- Makhnitskyi served as acting Prosecutor by being appointed by the acting President of Ukraine. Makhnitskyi is also the only head of the office in the post-Soviet Ukraine who served as a parliamentary commissioner.
- Shokin was set to be formally dismissed since February 16, 2016 after submitting a letter of resignation and taking a vacation. On March 16 Shokin returned to his duties as if he never submitted any letters of resignation. He was formally dismissed in a parliamentary vote on 29 March 2016.
- Yuriy Sevruk served as acting Prosecutor being the First Deputy General Prosecutor until the official appointment of a new Prosecutor General.
Ranks