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The Chief Prosecutor (Hungarian: Legfőbb ügyész, also known as the attorney general) is an official who is charged with prosecuting cases at a national level in Hungary. The chief prosecutor is elected by qualified majority of the parliament to 6 year terms, has a fixed office budget, and has no government oversight. The office of chief prosecutor has evolved into a separate branch of the government of Hungary since 1989.
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The independent pillar status of the Hungarian public accuser's office is a unique construction, loosely modeled on the system Portugal introduced after the 1974 victory of the Carnation Revolution. The public accuser (attorney general) body has become the fourth column of Hungarian democracy only in recent times: after communism fell in 1989, the office was made independent by a new clausule XI. of the Constitution. The change was meant to prevent abuse of state power, especially with regards to the use of false accusations against opposition politicians, who may be excluded from elections if locked in protracted or excessively severe court cases.
To prevent the Hungarian accuser's office from neglecting its duties, natural human private persons can submit investigation requests, called "pótmagánvád" directly to the courts, if the accusers' office refuses to do its job. Courts will decide if the allegations have merit and order police to act in lieu of the accuser's office if warranted. In its decision No.42/2005 the Hungarian constitutional court declared that the government does not enjoy such privilege and the state is powerless to further pursue cases if the public accuser refuses to do so.
The prosecutor's bodies of the Republic of Hungary
The General Prosecutor's Office is located at the top of the prosecutor's bodies, based in Budapest here. departments, classes and groups of heads. Monthly official journal of the Public Prosecutor's Gazette. The attorney general is under the direct supervision of[1]:
The criminal deputy attorney general under the direct supervision of:
The civil law and administrative law, Deputy Prosecutor General is under the direct supervision: