2025 Session Last amended: 2025 session

§ 8.31 — Additional Duties of Attorney General

Plain-Language Summary

This law gives the Minnesota Attorney General the power to investigate and take action against unfair, fraudulent, or illegal business practices. It also gives private citizens the right to sue businesses that break consumer protection and fair trade laws, and to recover damages and attorney fees.

Practical Notes
When this applies: When a business engages in unfair, discriminatory, deceptive, or unlawful practices in business, commerce, or trade — including consumer fraud, antitrust violations, false advertising, and unfair competition. Who this affects: The Minnesota Attorney General’s office, businesses operating in Minnesota, and consumers or other persons harmed by illegal business practices. Key points: The AG can investigate violations using subpoenas, interrogatories, and depositions — even without filing a lawsuit first. Courts can issue injunctions and impose civil penalties up to $25,000 per violation. Private citizens injured by violations can sue for damages, costs, and reasonable attorney fees (subdivision 3a). AG judgments serve as prima facie evidence in private lawsuits. The AG can accept assurances of discontinuance (consent agreements) that are enforceable as court orders. Covers a broad range of consumer protection and fair trade statutes.