Thanks, Ted. Turn to Slide 5 of our investment presentation and the sensitivity of our earnings to interest rates. As of March 31, 2023, approximately 89.2% of our debt securities portfolio were either floating rate with a spread to an interest rate index such as LIBOR, SOFR or Prime, with 52% of these still being linked to LIBOR. As you can see from the chart, the underlying benchmark rates on our assets during the quarter lagged the prevailing market rates and still remain significantly below the LIBOR and SOFR rates as of April 24, 2023. We expect this to normalize over time as the underlying one, three, six month contracts reset. For illustrative purposes, if all our assets were to reset to either a three-month LIBOR or SOFR rate, respectively, we would expect to generate an incremental $690,000 of quarterly income. Our liability costs would also rise relative to their Q1 levels. We would still expect a net positive benefit of approximately $0.06 per share, assuming all of our assets and liabilities are utilized in the same 3-month benchmark rates for an entire quarter. Skipping down to Slide 11. Both investment activity and originations for the first quarter were lower than the prior quarter, resulting in net repayments and sales of approximately $32.6 million. Net deployment consisted of new fundings of approximately $11.8 million, offset by approximately $44.4 million of repayments and sales. These new investments are expected to yield a spread to SOFR of 625 basis points on par balance and the investments were purchased at a cost of approximately 97% of par, which will generate incremental income to the stated spread. As mentioned during our last earnings call, it was our expectation that Q1 would generate more repayments than deployments as we intentionally drew up a portion of our revolver in Q4 2022 to invest ahead of several repayments. In February, we repaid $6.9 million of our 2018-2 secured notes. And in May, we expect to make another paydown of approximately $23 million. During the fourth quarter, we funded $5.6 million into our Great Lakes joint venture, which has taken us close to being fully funded under that commitment. Similar to our experience with new assets on the balance sheet, incremental investments in our Great Lakes joint venture have come at increasing spreads and widening OID, which should result in higher returns going forward. Our investment securities portfolio at the end of the first quarter remained highly diversified with investments spread across 28 different industries and 106 different entities, all while maintaining average par balance per entity of approximately $3.3 million. Turning to Slide 12. We had one incremental investment on nonaccrual as compared to December 31, 2022, which is a subordinated note in Lucky Bucks Holdings, which is valid at 24.75% of par. In aggregate, investments on nonaccrual status remained relatively low at five investments in the first quarter of 2023 as compared to four investments on nonaccrual status as of December 31, 2022. These five investments on nonaccrual status at the end of the first quarter of 2023 represents 0.3% and 1.5% of the company's investment portfolio at fair value and amortized cost, respectively. On Slide 13, as Ted mentioned in his opening remarks, if we focus on the top three rows of the table and exclude our investment in Pro R Holdings, which we have marked at 0, we have an aggregate debt securities fair value of $442 million -- $442.9 million, which represents a blended price of 91.11% of par value and is 85% comprised of first lien loans at par value. Assuming a par recovery, our March 31, 2023 fair values reflect a potential for $43.2 million of incremental NAV value of $4.52 per share. For illustrative purposes, if you were to assume a 10% default rate and a 70% recovery rate on this debt portfolio, there would still be an incremental $2.99 per share of NAV value over time as the portfolio matures and is repaid. This default rate is above anything the market is expecting or has experienced historically. Turning finally to Slide 14. If you aggregate these three acquired portfolios, over the last three years, we have purchased a combined $434.8 million of investments that have realized over 72% of these investments at a combined realized and unrealized mark of 102% of fair value at the time of closing their respective mergers. We were able to achieve these results despite the global pandemic in 2020 and most of 2021 and a weak market for almost all asset classes in 2022. In a similar vein as the previous slide, as of March 31, 2023, there remains an incremental $11.8 million of value as compared to par in these portfolios or $8.0 million when applying a similar 10% default rate and 70% recovery rate analysis. I'll now turn the call over to Jason to further discuss our financial results for the period.