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 . The prosecutor general is appointed and dismissed by the president with consent of the Verkhovna Rada. The prosecutor serves a term of office of six years and may be forced to resign by a vote of no confidence in parliament.
The Prosecutor General's Office dates to 1917, established by the fledgling Ukrainian governments following the collapse of the Russian Empire, when the minister of justice held the office of prosecutor general. In 1922, it was reorganized under socialist law after the Ukrainian Soviet Socialist Republic became a founding member of the Soviet Union. With adoption of the 1936 Constitution of the Soviet Union, the office became directly subordinated to the Prosecutor General Office of the Soviet Union; this lowered the status of the office, with the prosecutor appointed by the Soviet Prosecutor General and having no government post in the Ukraine SSR. Following the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, the Prosecutor General Office of Ukraine became an independent agency. The office is directly proscribed in the 1996 Constitution of Ukraine.

Duties and powers

The prosecutor general is appointed to office by the president of Ukraine with the consent of the Verkhovna Rada. The prosecutor is dismissed from office after serving a six-year term, or on order of the president, or the prosecutor may be forced to resign following a vote of no confidence in the Verkhovna Rada.
The powers of the office are to:
  • provide organization and leadership of pre-trial investigations;
  • support public prosecution in the courts; and
  • represent the state's interest in the courts, according to the law.
The prosecutor general submits an annual report to the Verkhovna Rada about the legal situation in the country.
The prosecutor general creates a collegiate council consisting of the prosecutor general, their first and other deputies, the prosecutor of the Autonomous Republic of Crimea, and other leaders of prosecution agencies.
The prosecutor general office's General Inspectorate is an independent agency established to oversee the actions of the prosecutorial system. Its goals are to modernize the Soviet-era bureaucracy, to enhance inter-agency efficiency and international cooperation, and to fight corruption.

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 Inspectorate
  • 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 of Ukraine was first established in 1917, following the dissolution of the Russian Empire. When the Ukrainian People's Republic was formed – after Ukraine declared its independence from the Russian Republic due to the Bolshevik's aggression – the post was held by the minister of justice.
TermName
11917–1918Dmytro Markovych
2Serhiy Shelukhin
3Mykhailo Chubynskyi
4Oleksiy Romanov
5Andriy Viazlov
6Viktor Reinbot

Soviet period

After the occupation of Ukraine by Bolsheviks in June 1922, the Prosecutor's Office of the Ukrainian SSR was established. The prosecutor general was appointed by the Ukrainian government and remained merged with the minister of justice until the 1936 Constitution of the Soviet Union came into force, at which point the republican prosecution office of Ukraine was subordinated to the prosecutor general of the USSR.
No.TermNameOfficial title
11922–1927Mykola SkrypnykProsecutor General
21927–1930Vasyl PoraikoProsecutor General
31930–1933Vasiliy PolyakovProsecutor General
41933–1935Mikhail MikhailikProsecutor General
51935–1936Arkadiy KiselyovProsecutor General
61936–1937Grigoriy ZhelyeznogorskiyProsecutor General
71938–1944Leonid YacheninProsecutor of the Ukrainian SSR
81944–1953Roman RudenkoProsecutor of the Ukrainian SSR
91953–1963Denys PanasyukProsecutor of the Ukrainian SSR
101963–1983Fedir HlukhProsecutor of the Ukrainian SSR
111983–1990Petro OsypenkoProsecutor of the Ukrainian SSR
121990–1991Mykhailo PotebenkoProsecutor of the Ukrainian SSR

Post-Soviet period

Following Ukrainian independence in 1991, the prosecutor general wielded considerable power as a legacy of the Soviet Union state prosecutor's office. Many of the office's functions were expanded in 1991, but in 2016 the powers of the office were decreased and limited.
Prior to January 2017, the term of authority of the prosecutor was five years. Since January 2017 this was increased to six years. This list below 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.
No.Prosecutor General of UkraineName
14 Sep 1991 – 21 Oct 1993
221 Oct 1993 – 19 Oct 1995Vladyslav Datsiuk
319 Oct 1995 – 22 Jul 1997Hryhoriy Vorsinov
act22 Jul 1997 – 24 Apr 1998Oleh Lytvak
act24 Apr – 17 Jul 1998Bohdan Ferents
417 Jul 1998 – 30 May 2002Mykhailo Potebenko
30 May 30 – 6 Jul 2002unknown
56 Jul 2002 – 29 Oct 2003Sviatoslav Piskun
29 Oct – 8 Nov 2003unknown
68 Nov 2003 – 9 Dec 2004Hennadiy Vasylyev
710 Dec 2004 – 14 Oct 2005Sviatoslav Piskun
14 Oct – 4 Nov 2005unknown
84 Nov 2005 – 26 Apr 2007Oleksandr Medvedko
926 Apr24 May 2007Sviatoslav Piskun
act24 May – 1 Jun 2007Viktor Shemchuk
101 Jun 2007 – 3 Nov 2010Oleksandr Medvedko
114 Nov 2010 – 22 Feb 2014Viktor Pshonka
comm22–24 Feb 2014Oleh Makhnitsky
act24 Feb – 18 Jun 2014Oleh Makhnitsky
1219 Jun 2014 – 11 Feb 2015Vitaly Yarema
1311 Feb 2015 – 29 Mar 2016Viktor Shokin
act29 Mar – 12 May 2016Yuriy Sevruk
1412 May 2016 – 29 Aug 2019Yuriy Lutsenko
1529 Aug 2019 – 5 Mar 2020Ruslan Riaboshapka
act6–17 Mar 2020Viktor Chumak
1617 Mar 2020 – 17 Jul 2022Iryna Venediktova
act17–27 Jul 2022Oleksiy Symonenko
1727 Jul 2022 - 31 October 2024Andriy Kostin
act31 October 2024 – 17 June 2025Oleksiy Khomenko
1817 June 2025 – presentRuslan Kravchenko