No — Connecticut does not provide a formal late-reporting procedure; attorneys must certify CLE compliance during their annual registration, and noncompliance triggers a 60-day cure period after a notice. The Connecticut CLE rules under Practice Book § 2-27A require the bar to offer noncompliant attorneys at least 60 days to come into compliance before further action.
Details & Rules:
- Connecticut attorneys complete 12 CLE credits by December 31 and report compliance as part of their annual registration, typically due the first Friday in March.
- The CLE rule (Practice Book § 2-27A) gives a noncompliant attorney 60 days after notice to cure the deficiency by completing missing credits or otherwise demonstrate compliance before further disciplinary or administrative steps.
- During that 60-day cure period, the attorney may complete and report the missing hours to avoid more severe measures.
- There is no indication in the public rules that Connecticut permits filing late CLE beyond the cure period or re-opening a closed reporting year for additional credits after that window.
- Attorneys must retain CLE records for 7 years in case of audit or inquiry.
Key Takeaway
You cannot freely report CLE late in Connecticut after the annual registration window, but if you receive a noncompliance notice you’ll have 60 days to cure the deficiency under the CLE rule.