All subsequent misconduct proceedings will be confidential pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 360 and JC&D Rule 23.
This sentence marks the boundary between the public and confidential phases of the process. From here, the chief judge reviews the identified complaint under JC&D Rule 11 and may dismiss it, conclude it on the basis of voluntary corrective action, or appoint a special committee of judges to investigate. A special committee reports its findings to the circuit's Judicial Council, which can impose remedies including private or public reprimand, temporary suspension of new case assignments, or a request that the judge voluntarily retire. What no actor in this process can do is remove an Article III judge from office — removal requires impeachment by the House of Representatives and conviction by the Senate. The proceedings themselves are confidential by statute, though final orders may be made public, just as this initiating order was disclosed under the Rule 23(b)(1) exception for maintaining public confidence in the judiciary.