Yes — judges in Indiana are subject to separate continuing judicial education (CJE) requirements distinct from the general CLE obligations for attorneys.
These judicial duties are governed under Indiana Admission and Discipline Rule 28, while general CLE is under Rule 29, and the two regimes overlap in approved credits but impose different minimums.
Details:
- Rule 29 expressly provides that attorneys who also serve as judges are governed by Rule 28 for education requirements.
- Under Rule 28 and implementing materials, “state level judicial officers” must complete 15 hours of approved courses per year, and 54 hours per three-year reporting period; at least 5 hours must be in professional responsibility, and no more than 18 hours may be non-legal subject matter.
- Other judicial officers (senior judges, part-time commissioners/referees, city/town or small claims court judges) must complete 6 hours per year and 36 hours per three-year period, with 3 hours in professional responsibility and a cap on non-legal subject matter credits.
- Courses approved for general CLE by the Indiana Office of Admissions & Continuing Education also qualify for judicial credit.
Key Takeaway
Judges in Indiana operate under a distinct judicial education framework (Rule 28) that requires higher credits (for many) and specialized rules, and they cannot rely solely on the attorney CLE minimums under Rule 29 to satisfy their obligations.