In December, WIRED took stock of then 17 known criminal investigations swirling around Donald Trump, Russia’s role in the 2016 election, and Trump’s network of businesses and business partners—probes by not just Special Counsel Robert Mueller but by at least a half-dozen other federal, state, and local investigators.

In the months since, there have been significant developments in many of the cases—particularly in the last three weeks, which have seen the release of Robert Mueller’s final report as special counsel, charges against DC power lawyer Greg Craig for his work alongside Paul Manafort, and the sentencing last week of Russian “spotter” Maria Butina, as well as the arrest of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange after the Ecuadoran government booted him out of its embassy in London, where he’d spent the better part of a decade hiding. Over the winter, prosecutors also charged Michael Flynn’s former business partners for their role in a Turkish lobbying scheme.

Now, as US attorney general William Barr prepares to face congressional hearings this week about the Mueller probe’s conclusions and deputy attorney general Rod Rosenstein, who oversaw the Mueller probe for nearly two years, resigns, a fresh assessment of the current investigative landscape facing Trump makes clear how the center of gravity of the probes has shifted to New York—to the Southern District, which continues several investigations into Trump’s world and to the new state attorney general, Letitia James, who has followed through on her campaign pledge to hold Trump accountable and who just Monday faced presidential Twitter opprobrium for her push to investigate the NRA.

“I’ve been saying for months that the Southern District of New York investigation presents a much more serious threat to the administration, potentially, than what Bob Mueller is doing,” Trump ally, former prosecutor, and one-time New Jersey governor Chris Christie told ABC News this winter.

Back in December, I ran down the 17 investigations, which at the time focused on questions about Trump’s world and Russian influence in the US, included the following:

1. The 2016 Russian election attack

2. Wikileaks

3. Middle Eastern influence

4. Paul Manafort’s activities

5. The Trump Tower Moscow project

6. Russia-Trump Campaign contacts

7. Presidential obstruction of jusice

8. Campaign finance violations and Trump Organization finances

9. Inauguration funding

10. SuperPAC funding

11. Foreign lobbying violations

12. Russian spy Maria Butina

13. Russian Internet Research Agency accountant Elena Alekseevna Khusyaynova

14. Turkish influence

15. Trump Organization tax fraud

16. Trump Foundation fraud

17. Violations of the emoluments clause

Today, perhaps half of those cases have more or less wrapped up. With a few minor exceptions, Mueller appears to have entirely wrapped up four major threads of his investigation: (No. 1) the Russian election attack, (No. 5) Trump Tower Moscow, (No. 6) the Trump-Russia contacts, and (No. 7) the obstruction probe, as well as—for the most part—(No. 4) the probe of Paul Manafort , although there are some signs in the Mueller report that prosecutors are still picking at loose ends there.

The Maria Butina case (No. 12), similarly, appears to be all but over, although her boyfriend, GOP adviser Paul Erickson, was charged in February with fraud unrelated to Russia or the 2016 campaign. There’s been no further movement in the case of the IRA’s accountant (No. 13) nor, according to the Justice Department, are there are any further sealed charges against other Russian hackers who were part of the GRU military intelligence unit or the Internet Research Agency.