About Ryan M.
Ryan M. Henry practices law across two states. He splits his professional life between New York and Connecticut courts and has built a career that blends courtroom work with bar leadership.
Henry earned his Juris Doctor from Albany Law School in 2004 after beginning studies in 2001. The law school years set the foundation for a practice built on litigation and service to the legal community. He maintains active ties to the institutions that shaped his early legal training.
He is admitted to practice in both New York and Connecticut. His bar work has extended beyond client files. He has served as Vice President of the Litchfield County Bar Association, a role that put him close to local court administration, lawyer education, and access-to-justice efforts.
Professional associations have been a steady part of his career. He has been a member of the American Association for Justice since 2013. Since 2018 he has served on the Board of Governors of the Connecticut Trial Lawyers Association. Those positions involve committee work, continuing legal education, and collaboration with other litigators across the state.
Henry practices from the Allingham, Readyoff & Henry, LLC. office. His day-to-day work includes preparing cases for trial, managing discovery, and appearing in hearings and motions practice in state and federal venues where appropriate. Colleagues describe him as direct in court and methodical in preparation.
He balances casework with the administrative responsibilities of bar leadership. The vice-presidential role in Litchfield County has him involved in local bar meetings and programming. On the CT Trial Lawyers Board of Governors he helps set agendas for statewide CLE and policy discussions.
Outside courtrooms and boardrooms he remains engaged in continuing education through the associations to which he belongs. That ongoing professional development informs how he handles evolving rules of evidence, procedure, and trial strategy.
He currently concentrates his practice on litigation in New York and Connecticut courts.