Victims of Bernard Madoff’s Ponzi scheme are set to begin 2018 with new checks totaling $584 million from the trustee unwinding the con man’s company, boosting total payouts to almost $11.4 billion.

The latest checks will range in size from $563 to almost $88 million, trustee Irving Picard said last week. With the payments, more than half of Madoff’s customers who submitted approved claims to Picard — or 1,386 of 2,265 — will have recovered their lost principal in full.

The distribution is financed by $1.3 billion in settlements and recoveries since the last payout in February, Picard said. It’s the ninth so far. Additional recoveries and payments are expected for 2018, he said.

“Nearly a decade since the unmasking of the Madoff fraud, we are still finding and recovering millions of dollars for the victims of this complex global deception,” Picard said in a statement.

The $12.8 billion recovered so far represents about 73 percent of the lost principal of $17.5 billion. Some of the money has been set aside pending resolution of lawsuits by victims seeking more cash than the trustee says they’re entitled to.

Picard has said he expects to recover all of the lost principal and perhaps more.

The trustee has been liquidating Manhattan-based Bernard L. Madoff Investment Securities since shortly after Madoff’s arrest in December 2008, which also wiped out tens of billions of dollars in fake profit that victims believed they held in their accounts. The trustee said he’d seek court approval of the distribution at a hearing set for Jan. 31 in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan.

Picard’s efforts got a major boost in September when Thema International Fund, the Irish investment fund that helped open a floodgate of European cash for Madoff’s firm in the early 1990s, agreed to pay $687 million to resolve the trustee’s lawsuit — the biggest such deal in six years. In June, the estates of Madoff’s dead sons, who worked for their father, agreed to pay $23 million to resolve similar litigation.

A separate $4 billion fund overseen by the Justice Department made its first distribution to victims in November, paying $772.5 million to more than 24,000 victims worldwide.