Attorneys are preparing for a new era in cryptocurrency litigation following the election Wednesday of Donald Trump as the next president.

And that includes Teresa Goody Guillén, a partner at Baker & Hostetler in its Washington, D.C., and San Francisco offices and co-leader of the Am Law 100 firm's blockchain technologies and digital assets team. She said a lot of litigation work has focused on U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission defense, but with Trump, who has launched his own tokens and vowed to fire Chair Gary Gensler, there will likely be a shift to private litigation.

Teresa Goody Guillén of Baker & Hostetler. Courtesy photo Teresa Goody Guillén of Baker & Hostetler. Courtesy photo