 Yesterday, a federal judge set a June 11 trial date for Kahn and alleged accomplice Curtis Lee Wyatt on a number of charges related to Kahn's alleged escape from home incarceration. Kahn allegedly removed his GPS monitoring device last June while meeting with attorneys in Lexington and disappeared. He was arrested in December while dining at a pizza hut in Honduras. The other trial will take place nearly a year from now. U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert Weir found that Kahn's new public defender would need that much time to review the massive amount of evidence in the case. He scheduled that trial for January 7 of next year. The January trial will cover the charges Kahn originally faced in an indictment handed down in 2016. In that case, he faces 18 charges, including conspiracy, wire fraud, mail fraud and money laundering related to a scheme to defraud Social Security. That case was supposed to be dismissed after Kahn pleaded guilty to theft and bribery last year. However, prosecutors say Kahn violated his plea agreement with his escape and they now plan to pursue all of the charges. The escape trial is expected to take three days. The conspiracy and fraud trial is expected to last 12. Back to you, Sean.