Roy Cooper, North Carolina

Roy Cooper serves as North Carolina's Attorney General to keep people safe by fighting crime, protecting consumers and helping crime victims.

Roy Cooper is pushing for tougher sentences for child predators and pornographers and more tools to help law enforcement track down offenders and require those who discover pedophiles to turn them in. He is leading a group of attorneys general who are pushing social networking sites such as MySpace to stop exposing children to predators and pornography. He has launched a computer forensics unit to hunt predators and offered guides to parents and teachers who protect children online. He has increased DNA testing of crime scene evidence and pushed to include all felons in the state's database of convicted offenders so that law enforcement can crack more cases and ensure that the right person is brought to justice.

To tackle the explosion in methamphetamine labs in North Carolina, Roy Cooper made it harder for criminals to get the key ingredient to make meth and ensured that criminals who manufacture the drug serve prison time, especially if they endanger children and law enforcers. He's targeting traffickers by going after large drug operations that bring meth, cocaine and other drugs into North Carolina.

Roy Cooper won laws that make it harder for identity thieves to steal consumers' personal information and easier for consumers to protect themselves. Roy Cooper also won a state Do Not Call law so that North Carolinians can choose who calls them at home. He and his consumer protection team have recovered more than $80 million in refunds for thousands of consumers.

To make our schools safer, Roy Cooper provided every school in North Carolina with a Critical Incident Response Kit that helps educators and law enforcement know what to do in a crisis.

Roy Cooper is helping victims of domestic violence and stalking find safe harbor through the Address Confidentiality Program. He fought for laws that make it a crime to commit abuse in front of children and that allow employers to get protective orders for their threatened employees, and he has pushed for more resources for victims of sexual assault. Before becoming Attorney General in 2001, Roy Cooper had a strong record of service as a state legislator, a lawyer, a civic leader and a community volunteer. He was born in Nash County, NC in 1957, attended public schools and worked summers cropping tobacco. He attended the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill as a Morehead Scholar, and after graduating from law school he went back home to practice law with his family law firm. Roy Cooper and his wife Kristin, who is also an attorney, have three daughters, Hilary, Natalie and Claire, who all attend public schools.