Katie concentrates her practice on matrimonial and family law. With a unique background in law and finance, Katie provides strategic representation to family law clients with a specialty working with high-net-worth individuals, particularly those with complicated fact patterns involving forensic assets and income tracing, business valuation, complex compensation, and high-end lifestyle issues.
Victoria Fife is a forensic accountant and testifying digital assets expert at CBIZ, specializing in complex tracing, valuation, and division of assets in high-net-worth divorce and civil litigation matters. With over a decade of hands-on blockchain experience, she is among the first U.S. court-qualified forensic experts providing full-scope cryptocurrency asset services and testimony in litigation.
Digital assets now surface in divorce filings with enough regularity that treating them as a niche concern exposes counsel to malpractice—a spouse can move six figures across chains and exchanges while a standard financial affidavit shows nothing. As crypto holdings move mainstream and concealment tactics grow more sophisticated, family-law attorneys still relying on conventional discovery templates miss assets that blockchain analysis would expose. This program pairs a high-net-worth matrimonial litigator with a court-qualified forensic crypto expert to teach you how to spot likely holdings, trace funds across chains and exchanges, secure usable records before they vanish, and defend valuation choices—which date to use, which pricing sources hold up—against volatility. You’ll leave able to build a defensible tracing narrative, draft discovery that actually reaches digital assets, litigate division of volatile positions, and account for or move crypto at enforcement. The attorney who treats crypto as exotic concedes ground to the spouse who understands it better.
What Will You Learn
Attorneys will learn how to spot likely crypto holdings, follow money across chains and exchanges, and secure usable records fast.
What Will You Gain
Attorneys will be able to build defensible tracing narratives, negotiate or litigate division of digital assets, and move or account for crypto when it's time to enforce.
Key topics to be discussed:
This course is co-sponsored with myLawCLE.
Date / Time: July 29, 2026
Closed-captioning available
Katie Pandolfini | Blank Rome
Katie Pandolfini is an associate in Blank Rome’s Matrimonial & Family Law group in Los Angeles, advising clients on all aspects of California family law with a focus on complex divorce proceedings and high-stakes financial matters. Her counsel spans asset and income tracing, business valuation, compensation structures, and lifestyle-related issues for high-net-worth individuals, and she also assists with custody and access rights as well as prenuptial, postnuptial, and cohabitation agreements. Her unique background in law and finance enables her to deliver strategic, detail-oriented solutions that protect clients’ interests during some of life’s most challenging transitions.
Katie earned her J.D. from the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva University, and her B.A. from the University of Maryland, College Park. She is admitted to practice in New Jersey, California, and New York. She is also a Certified Divorce Financial Analyst® and has completed training in divorce and family law mediation and collaborative law.
Katie was named to Best Lawyers in America© “Ones to Watch” in Family Law in 2026. She was listed as a Southern California “Rising Star” by Super Lawyers from 2022 through 2026, and as a New York Metro “Rising Star” by Super Lawyers from 2017 through 2021.
Katie is a member of the American Bar Association and an active member of its Family Law Division, and she serves as vice chair of the Beverly Hills Bar Association’s Family Law section. During law school, she was an editor for the Cardozo Journal of Law and Gender. She also speaks on digital assets and cryptocurrency in family law matters, including continuing legal education programs on identifying, tracing, and valuing crypto in divorce.
Katie’s Certified Divorce Financial Analyst® credential allows her to identify hidden risks and opportunities in asset division, compensation packages, and business valuations, and she reverse-engineers financial scenarios so clients can prioritize issues before they escalate. Rather than piecemeal fixes, she helps clients create clear, enforceable agreements and settlement strategies that withstand scrutiny, and is known for turning complex financial and custody issues into actionable plans. Her issue-triage approach identifies the 10 percent of issues that create 90 percent of the conflict, giving clients a roadmap across financial exposure, custody and parenting concerns, lifestyle and support obligations, and litigation risk.
Victoria Fife | CBIZ Forensic Consulting Group
Victoria Fife is a forensic accountant and digital assets subject matter expert at CBIZ in the Forensic Consulting Group, specializing in the complex tracing, valuation, and division of assets in high-net-worth divorce and civil litigation matters. She is among the first and few court-qualified U.S. forensic expert witnesses providing full-scope crypto asset services and testimony in litigation. She regularly consults on cases involving digital assets — including asset tracing and valuation analyses for disposition and division, legal disclosure, breach of fiduciary duty claims, damages calculations, and cryptocurrency scam investigations — and is known for developing practical methodologies and a fair, logical approach to the treatment of digital assets in litigation.
Victoria earned her bachelor’s degree in accounting and business management from Capella University, graduating with honors and as a member of the Delta Mu Delta Honor Society. She holds the Certified Cryptocurrency Forensic Investigator (CCFI), Chainalysis Reactor Certification (CRC), Certified Ethereum Professional (CEP), and Certified Bitcoin Professional (CBP) credentials.
Victoria was named an honoree on the 2024 Women in FinTech Powerlist in the Financial and Professional Services category, and was recognized on the CBIZ Women’s Advantage 2025 Women to Watch list.
Victoria is a recurring speaker for professional associations including the American Bar Association and the AICPA, and a guest on industry podcasts and webinars. She is the founder of Forensics on the Block, a professional network focused on training, education, and the evolving impact of digital assets on forensic accounting and litigation, and serves as a Regional Ambassador for the Association of Women in Cryptocurrency. She is a member of the AICPA, the ACFE, CalCPA, and ACAMS.
With over a decade of hands-on experience in blockchain-based assets and technologies, Victoria has contributed to hundreds of cases since 2016. She joined CBIZ in 2022 and has been a catalyst in the expansion of the firm’s digital assets initiative. Prior to CBIZ, she worked in the Forensic Accounting division at Gursey | Schneider LLP, where she developed her focus on complex tracing analyses and large-scale data projects.
SESSION 1 – Finding and Tracing Assets | 1:00pm – 1:20pm
Learn to spot the signals of undisclosed crypto holdings and follow funds across multiple blockchains, wallets, and exchanges—building the evidentiary trail that connects on-chain activity to a spouse who claims to own nothing.
SESSION 2 – Smart, Defensible Discovery and Disclosure | 1:20pm – 1:40pm
Draft discovery requests that actually reach digital assets, compel exchange records and wallet data, and secure usable documentation fast—before positions move or accounts close—structuring disclosure demands that withstand objection and produce admissible proof.
SESSION 3 – Valuation Choices That Hold Up | 1:40pm – 2:00pm
Resolve the questions that decide value: which valuation date controls, which pricing sources a court will trust, and how to handle volatile positions—so your number survives cross-examination and the opposing expert’s challenge.
BREAK | 2:00pm – 2:10pm
SESSION 4 – Division, Remedies and Enforcement | 2:10pm – 2:25pm
Litigate or negotiate the division of volatile digital assets, then actually collect—learn the remedies and mechanics for moving, transferring, or accounting for crypto when it’s time to enforce a judgment or settlement.
SESSION 5 – Concealment, Fraud and Regulatory Friction | 2:25pm – 2:40pm
Recognize the concealment tactics and crypto scams now surfacing in family-law matters, and work through the regulatory friction that complicates tracing, recovery, and enforcement when a spouse hides assets behind pseudonymous transactions.