The Russian prosecutorial system traces its origins to a decree of
Peter the Great of , which created the post of prosecutor general under the
Governing Senate. The first prosecutor general was Count
Pavel Yaguzhinsky. Peter described the office as "my eye", a phrase later associated with the supervisory role of the prosecutor general. From 1802, the prosecutorial institution became part of the newly established
Ministry of Justice of the Russian Empire, and the minister of justice simultaneously held the office of prosecutor general. The judicial reform of 1864 separated prosecutorial and judicial functions and provided for prosecutors attached to courts. After the
October Revolution, the
Council of People's Commissars of the RSFSR abolished the pre-revolutionary courts, judicial investigators, prosecutorial supervision, jury advocacy and private advocacy by the Decree on Courts No. 1 of November 1917. Their functions were transferred to people's courts, revolutionary tribunals and special investigative commissions. In May 1922, the
All-Russian Central Executive Committee adopted the first Soviet regulation on prosecutorial supervision, establishing a state prosecutor's office within the People's Commissariat of Justice. Its functions included supervision of legality, oversight of investigative bodies, participation in prosecution before courts, and supervision over the legality of detention. In 1923 the Prosecutor's Office of the
Supreme Court of the Soviet Union was established. In 1933 the was created as a separate state body. The
1936 Constitution of the Soviet Union vested supreme supervision over the exact implementation of laws by state bodies, officials and citizens in the Prosecutor of the USSR. During the
Great Patriotic War, prosecutorial bodies were reorganized for wartime conditions. In 1946, the office was renamed the Prosecutor General of the USSR. The 1977 Soviet Constitution and the 1979 USSR Law on the Procuracy further defined the office's role in legal supervision, criminal prosecution, investigation and coordination of law-enforcement bodies. After the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, Russia adopted a new Federal Law "On the Prosecutor's Office of the Russian Federation" in January 1992. The law removed prosecutorial supervision over citizens' compliance with laws, prohibited prosecutorial interference in economic activity, and introduced supervision over the observance of human and civil rights and freedoms. The 1993 Constitution of Russia established the unity and centralization of the prosecutorial system. Although the Prosecutor's Office is formally independent of the three branches of government, the constitutional provisions on it are located in the chapter concerning the judiciary and the Prosecutor's Office. Since 2011, the Prosecutor's Office has no longer conducted preliminary criminal investigations in cases formerly assigned to it. Those functions were transferred to the
Investigative Committee of Russia, which had operated in 2007–2011 as the Investigative Committee under the Prosecutor's Office and then became a separate federal body. == Functions ==