No, although I don't think it is prohibited. They may have a lot of action behind the scenes though, and could approve some ideas or ways the prosecution may attack certain angles of a case. I don't believe there are any modern examples of a US AG prosecuting cases themselves. I equate it to POTUS not hitting the launch button for sending Tomahawks into some rogue regime, but you know he made the decision to do so.
No, although I don't think it is prohibited. They may have a lot of action behind the scenes though, and could approve some ideas or ways the prosecution may attack certain angles of a case. I don't believe there are any modern examples of a US AG prosecuting cases themselves. I equate it to POTUS not hitting the launch button for sending Tomahawks into some rogue regime, but you know he made the decision to do so.
So technically Rudy can still be AG.