Thanks, Dan. Good morning, everyone, and thank you all for joining. I'm Justin Plouffe, the CEO of the Carlyle BDCs and Deputy Chief Investment Officer of Carlyle's Global Credit Platform. As you may know, Aren LeeKong, who was previously CEO of the Carlyle BDCs, resigned to pursue new opportunities professionally. We have benefited from Aren's industry expertise and leadership and thank him for his contributions. For those of you on the line that I have not spoken with before, I've been part of Carlyle's Global Credit team since 2007, besides focusing more broadly on managing growth and credit strategies at Carlyle, I've also been a member of Carlyle's Private Credit Investment Committee since its inception. I look forward to taking on responsibility for the Direct Lending strategy, and I'll be working very closely with existing leadership, most notably, Tom Hennigan and Mike Hadley. I've worked with Tom and Mike for over 12 years at Carlyle, and I'm excited to continue our partnership in support of Carlyle Secured Lending and the broader Carlyle Direct Lending platform. And with that said, I'll focus my remarks today on 3 topics. First, I'll provide an overview of the first quarter 2024 financial results. Next, I'll touch on the current market environment. And finally, I'll conclude with a few comments on the quarter's investment activity and portfolio positioning. Starting off with earnings. We continue to see our financial performance benefit from a higher base rate environment. In the first quarter, we generated net investment income of $0.54 per share, which represents an annualized yield of nearly 13% based on our 3/31 NAV. Our Board of Directors declared a total second quarter dividend of $0.47 per share, consisting of our base dividend of $0.40 plus the $0.07 supplemental. Our net asset value as of March 31 was $17.07 per share, up $0.08 or approximately 0.5% from the December 31 period, primarily as a result of our Q1 earnings outpacing our dividend. Turning now to the market environment. Activity picked up in the first quarter of 2024 as the reopening of the syndicated loan market and tighter terms drove overall refinancing activity and rebalancing of private and public credit markets. LBO activity has picked up in 2024 and the broader M&A market is expected to become more active in the second half of the year, which we expect to result in an uptick in origination volume. While we do not try to predict interest rates, our Chief Economist at Carlyle, Jason Thomas is one of the few that saw significant rate cuts as improbable back in November of 2023. Now that the market consensus has caught up with them, we are pleased to report that despite interest rates stabilizing at higher-than-expected levels. Carlyle portfolio company data continues to show the real economy holding off well. Although we've seen pricing pressure increase particularly in the U.S. upper-middle market, the core middle market where we operate continues to be comparatively less volatile. Originations in the first quarter were up over 30% year-over-year and our pipeline continues to expand with both regular way and differentiated deal flow. As a reminder, it has always been our goal to drive performance with a consistent approach to direct lending, anchored in disciplined credit selection and conservative portfolio management. We remain focused on our core middle-market strategy and benefit from the differentiation provided by our access to the OneCarlyle platform while maintaining our ability to be dynamic in response to market changes. While increasing origination activity is a positive for our strategy, we are most focused on the overall credit performance of our existing portfolio. Nonaccruals improved significantly in the first quarter, and as Tom will discuss in detail later, we completed the recapitalization of Dermatology Associates and successfully exited Direct Travel during the first quarter. Our portfolio remains highly diversified and is comprised of 174 investments in 131 companies across more than 25 industries. The median EBITDA across our core portfolio at the end of the quarter was $81 million. The average exposure in any single portfolio company is less than 1%, and 95% of our investments are in senior secured loans. As always, discipline and consistency drove performance in the first quarter, and we expect these tenets to drive performance in future quarters. I will now hand the call over to our CFO, Tom Hennigan.