About Rylee
Rylee Broyles is an attorney practicing in Kansas who entered the profession after completing law school in the early 2020s. She took the direct route from undergraduate study into law school, finishing a Bachelor of Science at Fort Hays State University in 2018 and earning her J.D. from Washburn University School of Law in 2021. Those years shaped the foundation of her practice and placed her in the Kansas legal community at a relatively early stage in her career.
Her academic record shows a steady progression through higher education in the state. At Fort Hays State University she completed a B.S. program in 2018, then spent three years at Washburn Law, graduating in 2021. The timeline signals a swift transition from university to the bar-adjacent professional world, and she has remained active in local professional circles since.
After law school Broyles began practicing in Kansas. She maintains active involvement in regional legal organizations, including membership in the Kansas Association of Defense Counsel and the Wichita Bar Association. Those memberships reflect the professional networks she has built and the continuing education opportunities she pursues. Colleagues and peers in the state bar community know her through those associations and through routine engagement with local court practitioners.
Broyles’s work centers on defense matters. She handles civil defense and related litigation tasks, including case assessment, pleadings, discovery strategy, and preparation for hearings. Her approach is methodical and rooted in procedural detail. She balances courtroom preparation with efforts to manage cases efficiently for clients and insurers, drawing on the practical skills developed since law school.
She practices across the state of Kansas and participates in the professional organizations that serve defense lawyers and local practitioners. That involvement keeps her connected to developments affecting civil practice in the region. She currently concentrates her practice on defense litigation in Kansas.