US Department of Justice

Overview

The Department of Justice is the federal government's primary law enforcement and legal agency, established in 1870 to centralize federal legal work under the attorney general. It enforces federal laws, protects civil rights, and represents the United States in court through 94 district offices nationwide. The DOJ oversees major law enforcement agencies, including the FBI, DEA, ATF, US Marshals Service, and Federal Bureau of Prisons, with more than 115,000 employees and a fiscal 2024 budget of $44B.

1440 Findings

Hours of research by our editors, distilled into minutes of clarity.

  • The Department of Justice spent $44B in 2024

    In fiscal year 2024, the Department of Justice spent approximately $44B—making it the 14th-largest federal agency by total spending. Its budget funds law enforcement activities, prosecutions, prisons, and grants to state and local justice initiatives.

  • The Department of Justice is led by the US attorney general

    The attorney general acts as the nation's top law enforcement official—managing all Department of Justice activities, overseeing US attorneys, and advising the president and federal agencies on legal issues that influence policy and enforcement.

  • Watch the DOJ attempt to reform a local police department in 2016

    This report examines federal oversight of Newark's police department as the DOJ enforces reforms following its investigation into civil rights violations, highlighting the challenges of reforming local policing through federal intervention.

  • Trace the history of DOJ antitrust enforcement

    This podcast series traces how the US government's approach to regulating big business has changed over a century—from the DOJ's breakup of John D. Rockefeller's Standard Oil monopoly, through lawyer Robert Bork's influence on how courts interpret competition law, to the FTC's modern antitrust lawsuit against Amazon.

  • The DEA enforces federal drug laws under the Department of Justice

    Established in 1973, the Drug Enforcement Administration directs federal efforts to fight illegal drug trafficking, oversee controlled substances, and dismantle large narcotics networks both within the United States and internationally.