A.Purpose. An interview panel may interview an applicant to assist the board in reviewing the application, making a determination about an applicant's qualifications (including character and fitness), and evaluating any items for which there are discrepancies or inadequate information.B.Interview panel. The board chair, or its designee, may form an interview panel consisting of the board, a bar examiner, or a committee of the board. An interview panel may consist of one or more persons.C.Notice of interview. If the board requires an interview of an applicant, it shall give notice to the applicant at least thirty (30) days in advance of the proposed interview date, or any shorter period of time as may be agreed by the board and the applicant, with copies of the notice sent to the interview panel. The notice shall:(1) describe the subject matter of the interview;(2) give the date, time, place, and method of the interview;(3) inform the applicant of the applicant's duty to cooperate, and to appear and participate in the interview;(4) inform the applicant that the interview is confidential with no observers permitted, although the applicant may elect to have counsel present during the interview; and(5) inform the applicant that the interview panel is obligated to reach itsdecision based on the information it receives and that the applicant bears the burden of proof. D.Format. An interview is not a "hearing" as described in these rules, and is generally in the format of a collaborative discussion between the interview panel and the applicant, so that the panel may obtain a full understanding of the issues identified as the subject matter of the interview, and any other items concerning the applicant's application for which the interview panel desires additional information or explanation. An interview is confidential with no other participants permitted, although an applicant may have counsel present to observe the interview. An interview may be recorded by the board. Information gathered at an interview, and the board's recording of an interview, shall be admissible at a hearing described in these rules. An applicant's truthfulness, candor, and responsiveness during an interview shall be considered relevant to the applicant's qualifications.E.Duty to cooperate. An applicant has a duty to appear for interviews noticed by the board. The board may summarily deny admission to an applicant who fails to appear for an interview without good cause.F.Interview reports. After an interview, the interview panel shall make a confidential written report to the board that:(1) it recommends the applicant appears to be qualified for admission without further board action;(2) it needs additional information, interview, action from the applicant, or combination thereof, before it can make a recommendation on the applicant's qualifications for admission;(3) it recommends the applicant appears to be qualified for conditional admission, and identify the reasons together with the proposed conditions for admittance; or(4) it recommends that the applicant should appear for a hearing.G.Board action. After completion of an interview, the board shall inform the applicant of the outcome of the interview and the next steps for the application process.As amended, effective 11/1/1994; as amended by Supreme Court Order No. 13-8300-012, effective 5/14/2013; as amended by Supreme Court Order No. S-1-RCR-2023-00036, effective 12/31/2023. ANNOTATIONS The 2013 amendment, approved by Supreme Court Order No. 13-8300-012, effective May 14, 2013, required that bar examiners have an active bar membership; authorized the Supreme Court to approve compensation in addition to per diem and mileage for service by bar examiners to the board; in Paragraph A, deleted the former title of the paragraph and added the current title, after "Bar examiners shall be", deleted "practicing", and after "judges with a", added "active bar membership and"; and in Paragraph B, in the second sentence, after "public officers attending meetings" added the remainder to the sentence. The 1994 amendment, effective November 1, 1994, made gender neutral changes throughout the rule.