About Michael
Michael Boyle earned his law degree from John Marshall Law School in 2013, after completing undergraduate studies at Loyola College in 2009. He moved through the standard stages of legal training while still in school, pairing classroom work with hands-on placements. Those early experiences shaped the practical side of his approach to law.
While at law school he worked inside courts and clinics. He served as a judicial extern in 2012 at the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He also spent time as a legal intern at Amin Talati & Upadhye, LLP and as a clerk at The John Marshall School Veterans Legal Support Center and Clinic in 2011. In 2012 he ran a summer program for the Just The Beginning Foundation, directing activities that blended legal education and outreach.
After graduation he moved into in-house work. In 2013 he was listed as counsel at 4G Home Rentals, handling the kinds of transactional and regulatory issues that come up for property-based businesses. Two years later he joined Tully Rinckey PLLC as an associate. That step put him into a firm environment where litigation, corporate work and creditor-debtor matters intersect.
Boyle is admitted to practice in New York. He has taken on leadership roles in local bar groups. Since 2018 he has served as president of the Capital Region Bankruptcy Bar Association and as secretary of the Schenectady County Bar Association. Those positions have kept him in regular contact with judges, trustees and other practitioners in the bankruptcy community.
Colleagues describe his work as practical and procedural. He has experience drafting pleadings, negotiating resolutions and appearing in bankruptcy-related hearings. His background in both in-house and firm settings gives him a view of how legal strategy affects business decisions. He also draws on his clinic and externship work when mentoring newer lawyers and law students.
As of 2026 he is an associate at Tully Rinckey PLLC. He practices in New York and handles matters arising from bankruptcy and related creditor-debtor issues.