Yes. The department of Justice is under the President. The Attorney General heads it and he is a cabinet member.
The head of the Department of Justice is the Attorney General.The current Attorney General is Eric H. Holder Jr. who was sworn in on February 3, 2009 by Vice-President Joe Biden.
The attorney general is the head of the United States Department of Justice.
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Federal prisons are jurisdiction of the Bureau of Prisons, and is subordinate to the United States Department of Justice. At state level, they're usually maintained by the Department of Corrections, which will normally be subordinate to the state Department of Justice or Department of Public Safety.
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The President.
Yes. The Secretary of Defense.
The president has charge of every federal agency except the courts and the people who serve as direct employees of Congress. Lower level workers are protected by civil service so the president can not do much with them directly.
The Union general that President Lincoln placed in charge of the department of Mississippi was Ulysses S. Grant.
In the United States, the Attorney General is a cabinet level position. The Attorney General is in charge of the US Justice Department.
The US Attorney General is in charge of the Department of Justice (DOJ). Although one of the original four cabinet positions in 1789, the Attorney General was not the head of an official agency until the Justice Department was created in 1870, to consolidate the legal roles of the US departments and the United States Attorneys.
No. The Attorney General is the Head of the Department of Justice. The Department of Treasury is in charge of the US Mints, which is headed by the Secretary of the Treasury. See the link below.