Preface
1. The Attorney General of the United States
-Serving Two Masters
-The Attorney General as Legal Advisor
-The Attorney General as Policy Advisor
-The Tradition of Law and Politics
-Defining the Appropriate Relationship
2. The Emergence of the Modern Law Officer
-The Development of the English Office
-The American Colonial Experience
-The Office of the Confederacy
-The Judiciary Act of 1789
-“Mongrel” or “Chameleon”: The First Attorney General
-The Institutionalization of the Office
-The Coming of the Department of Justice
3. The Advocate Attorney General
-Roger Taney: The General’s General
-Caleb Cushing and “The Amiable Mediocrity”
-The Law Officers of Franklin D. Roosevelt
-The Advocacy Role of Robert F. Kennedy
-Edwin Meese III and the Reagan Presidency
4. The Danger of the Advocate: Abusing the Office
-A. Mitchell Palmer and the Red Raids
-The “Morally Ambiguous” Harry Daugherty
-John Mitchell and the 1972 Campaign
5. The Neutral Attorney General
-William Wirt: The Eminent Attorney
-The “Star Route” Scandal and Benjamin Brewster
-Restoring Confidence: Harlan Fiske Stone
-Edward Levi and President Ford
-Griffin Bell’s Neutral Zone
6. In Conclusion
Appendix. United States Attorneys General
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index