The DOJ traces its beginnings at the Revolutionary Assembly in
Naic,
Cavite on April 17, 1897. The
Department of Grace and Justice was tasked with the establishment of a regime of law in the Republic, with Severino de las Alas at the helm. The department, however, was not included in President
Emilio Aguinaldo's
Biak-na-Bato Cabinet, which was established in November 1897. Shortly after the proclamation of independence on June 12, 1898, President Aguinaldo resurrected the department as the
Department of Justice via a September 26, 1898 decree. The department, however, disappeared again from Aguinaldo's Cabinet upon the proclamation of the
First Republic in 1899. After the American occupation a year later, the military government established the
Office of the Attorney of the Supreme Court. On June 11, 1901, it was renamed the
Office of the Attorney General and on September 1 of the same year, the office became the
Department of Finance and Justice. In 1916, the department became a separate entity (once again the Department of Justice) by virtue of the
Jones Law, and was given administrative supervision over all courts of first instance and other inferior courts. Under the Japanese occupation, the department became the
Commission of Justice, and later the
Ministry of Justice upon the proclamation of the
Second Philippine Republic in 1943. After the country's liberation from the Japanese forces near the end of
World War II, the restored
Commonwealth government re-activated the Department. Soon, the Supreme Court under the then 1973 Constitution took over the administrative supervision of all lower courts from the DOJ. The succeeding 1987 Constitution upheld it. It became the Ministry of Justice once more in 1973 during
Martial Law, continuing in that form until 1987, when the return to a presidential form of government as mandated by the
1987 Constitution transformed all ministries back to departments. Today, the DOJ continues to pursue its primary mission "To Uphold the Rule of Law" with its "Justice for All" motto. The Office of the Secretary (OSEC) is composed of the National Prosecution Service, the Legal Staff, the Administrative, Financial, Technical and Planning and Management Services and the Board of Pardons and Parole. The constituent and attached agencies include the
National Bureau of Investigation (NBI),
Bureau of Immigration (BI), Public Attorney’s Office (Philippines) (PAO),
Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), Office of the Government Corporate Counsel (OGCC),
Bureau of Corrections (BuCOR),
Parole and Probation Administration (PPA),
Presidential Commission on Good Government (PCGG) and the
Land Registration Authority (LRA). ==List of secretaries of justice==