Thank you, Jamie. As Jamie and Scott emphasized, our strategic actions during the third quarter of 2024 have laid the groundwork for repositioning our balance sheet and stabilizing earnings. While these efforts involve moving loans to held-for-sale status and thoroughly reviewing our ACL methodology, the focus is now on executing the loan sales to unlock value. As you know, we have taken a bold and responsible action to reposition our balance sheet, highlighted by our reclassification of $1.9 billion of multifamily portfolio loans to held-for-sale status, as outlined in our recent October 3 press release and noted by both Scott and Jamie earlier. These efforts are designed to reduce exposure to fixed rate assets, while unlocking capital to fund more strategic, relationship-driven opportunities in commercial and industrial lending. As stated on our previous call, First Foundation intends to explore every avenue to ensure best execution, including options through its existing relationships, as well as potential private party sales. Historically, First Foundation has successfully completed numerous securitizations, and it has once again ex a term sheet for a potential securitization for approximately $500 million to be with a named partner. Third-party outside counsel has been engaged along with a placement agent. The bank has begun the due diligence process, with credit approval and settlement anticipated to occur late in the fourth quarter of 2024. While this deal time line can shift, executing in the time line identified is a priority. As a reminder, final pricing is dependent on settlement at the time of close. As Jamie has noted, management has finalized the process of working with an outside third-party to determine the potential mark as a result of a fair market value analysis. But I will reiterate again that we are committed to best execution as we work to ultimately disposition the assets and reduce our multifamily real estate and fixed rate asset exposures. To this end, the bank is also simultaneously exploring direct private party loan sales as well. While these sales should be smaller in size, they will allow for more flexible positioning of assets over time to flow into the market and essentially blunt any rate impacts in response to the changing Fed policy landscape. As a reminder, the loans moved to held for sale focused on those with balances approximately between $1.5 million and $4.5 million, and which are set to reprice in the next 18 to 36 months. Reducing these balances will mute the impact of the historical loan growth we saw in 2022 and the repricing uncertainty they could introduce over the horizon. The market needs to be able to model this pivot and we, as management, have provided additional detail of our findings on this earnings call in order to assist in facilitating proper expectations. Despite the noteworthy strength of the loan portfolio and the historical lack of loan losses since the bank's inception, management recognizes the bank is a statistical outlier when compared to similarly situated peers. Because First Foundation's concentration in commercial real estate is narrowly tailored in the traditionally lower loss end of the multifamily asset class, the historic loss factor has not led to the bank setting aside large reserves under the current expected credit loss model. We do believe, however, that there is an element of interest rate risk in the market, which is truly unprecedented, and that First Foundation needs to continue its detailed review of its ACL methodology as a result. I want to be clear, as has been the thematic position on all of our preceding earnings calls to-date, we do not believe we have material credit losses on the horizon. As we have always done, we intend on providing confidence that our reserves are adequate to address any changes in credit quality or interest rate risk that may be present in the market. And we believe that to do so, the aforementioned holistic review of our methodology is appropriate as the industry continues to indicate challenges with other asset classes and underwriting methodologies. As a result of this review, will likely conclude in an increase to the bank's reserve to be more in line with similarly sized and concentrated peers over time with a simultaneous and pragmatic shift in our lending originations and portfolio concentrations, particularly, as the bank continues its strategic diversification and its concentration to index plus margin-based pricing on more C&I lending activity as part of our continued growth initiatives. It is worth noting that while reducing our fixed rate asset exposure and diversifying into index plus margin-based pricing is not a new goal and has been part of our strategic plan for nearly a decade. We are not new to C&I lending, and our existing teams are well seasoned and very experienced. As always, we are focused on conservatively underwritten C&I lending where we prioritize deep cross-platform relationships. The year-to-date results highlight a dramatic pivot, as 91% of our lending through the third quarter has been an adjustable C&I product. As we do this, you can anticipate the continually referenced increase in our CECL reserves as a byproduct of the asset class and historical data, which supports it. We believe this will be a strong early step in positioning the company in line with the risk profile of peers. All of our teams have worked together to manage the strategic direction of our diverse and strong loan portfolio, which as of September 30, 2024, remains comprised of 52% multifamily loans, 32% commercial business loans, 9% consumer and single-family residence loans, 6% non-owner-occupied commercial real estate and approximately 1% of land and construction loans. From an operational perspective, we continue to challenge our lending departments and adapt to a heavy focus on asset quality review. If there are cracks coming in the economy, we want to spot them proactively. Obviously, we continue to maintain our steadfast cautious yet proactive approach to growing with strong asset quality. Loan fundings continue to be comprised primarily high-quality adjustable rate C&I SBA and mortgage lending totaling $366 million for the third quarter, offset by loan payoffs of $467 million for the quarter. Despite regional pressures and rhetoric around certain geographical challenges, in multifamily housing, we remain confident in the asset class as we have underwritten it, particularly our unique workforce housing exposure within the broadly defined sector. On previous calls, you have heard our teams speak to the value of workforce housing in the face of record low housing affordability. As a reminder, California is a rent-controlled state and is where approximately 88% of our multifamily loans are located. The bank has limited exposure to the Sunbelt region, the Midwest and the Northeast markets. Looking at our entire portfolio. Its strength is evident in both its continued credit quality metrics and the low NPAs to total assets ratio for the third quarter of 33 basis points, compared to 18 basis points from the prior quarter and 10 basis points from the third quarter of 2023. Our current NPAs are largely the byproduct of a single relationship specifically. None of the NPAs are multifamily assets. Further, the noted relationship has subsequently paid one of its two loans current shortly after the end of the third quarter. The bank anticipates the second loan will be paid current as well within the coming weeks, as Scott noted earlier. While this borrower has exhibited this pattern in practice historically, we are confident in the underlying assets have incredibly low loan to values. Otherwise, our NPAs are rooted in properly margin collateral with a healthy reserve relative to the specific asset and no meaningful or material anticipated risk of loss. Our underwriting remains largely unchanged and staunchly conservative, with weighted average LTVs of 53% for multifamily loans and 54% for single-family loans. We are well into the second phase of our strategic plan and are transitioning to a more offensive and measured strategy to capitalize on what will surely be market opportunities ahead. To kick off this transition, First Foundation, like many of its peers, was a benefactor of a 50 basis point rate cut as a result of the FOMC's September meeting. This start to the anticipated rate cutting cycle allowed the bank to mitigate its liability sensitivity quickly by reducing rates across the portfolio. We continue to navigate a complex interest rate environment shaped by these recent FOMC actions, and we'll continue to visually respond to volatility. During this quarter, we implemented the following rate adjustments for ICS deposits, retail deposits, digital deposits and larger, more specialized deposit channels to position us for stronger earnings as these changes take full effect in Q4 of 2024. ICS in retail, 50 basis point reductions for balances with current rates over 2.5%, and 30 basis points for accounts between 1% and 2.5%. No changes were made to deposits below 1%. As a reminder, ICS, or insured cash sweep deposits, allow customers, typically businesses or municipalities, to access FDIC insurance for large deposits over the $250,000 insurance limit by spreading funds across multiple banks within a network. Customers still receive 1 consolidated statement and access their funds through their primary banking relationship at First Foundation. CDs, we adjusted 9-month APYs from 5% to 4.75% and 12-month APYs from 4.85% to 4.6%, ensuring competitive but sustainable offerings. ECR deposits, reductions in earnings credit payouts were also approximately 50 basis points across the board. Earnings credit rate, or ECR, is a non-interest compensation mechanism for business clients with commercial accounts. With ECR, First Foundation clients earn credits based on the balances they maintain in their accounts, which can offset banking fees like wire transfer or treasury management services. This allows businesses to reduce operating costs without earning taxable interest. ECR accounts are essential in deepening relationships at First Foundation with our larger business clients. They allow us to offer attractive deposit options that help clients manage liquidity efficiently, while also benefiting from the fee offsets. This supports our treasury management growth strategy and encourages businesses to consolidate more of their financial activities with us. Digital Bank customers. To build momentum before year-end, the bank leveraged a target motion offering higher interest rates for new customers, who open accounts and meet specific deposit thresholds. The long-term strategy can and will be paired with digital marketing campaigns, emphasizing the ease of online account opening vis-a-vis our new instant account verification, funding technology and competitive rates, positioning First Foundation's digital bank among the top tier offerings. These adjustments are already contributing to our cost efficiency and will be more prominently reflected in the coming quarter's full earnings as we did not inure the benefit of a full quarter of cost savings during the third quarter as a result of the FOMC meeting late September kickoff to a rate-cutting cycle. These moves in rates, as described, are designed to blunt the impact of rate cuts, while preserving liquidity and ensuring a smooth pivot towards increased profitability. As you know, First Foundation has a broad geographic footprint, Florida, Texas, Nevada, California and even Hawaii. We see significant untapped potential in the markets within these geographies. With our physical presence in mature C&I lending infrastructure, we're well positioned to grow. And frankly, the opportunity is right in front of us. Our strategy is simple. We focus on relationships, not just transactions, but deposit growth is where it starts because deposits drive everything. We're going to leverage these markets heavily, offering a full platform to clients who want long, true banking partnerships. We've made it clear, new bankers in these markets will have both loan and deposit goals, and they will be incentivized to build self-funding relationships. This isn't just about loans or chasing deposits, it's about creating a balanced, stainable portfolio that fuels growth and profitability across regions. The pieces are in place, and now it's all about execution, and we are focused on getting it done. We remain laser-focused on service as our core value proposition. It's what sets us apart in the marketplace. In the near term, we're keeping a close watch on liquidity and funding that's just smart management. We're not waiting around. We have already taken meaningful steps to strengthen our core funding base. Loan sales will help us reduce reliance on broker deposits and Federal Home Loan Bank advances, which are fine tools when needed, but not where we want to live long term. The real game changer will be building up granular core deposits because that's the foundation for sustainable, long-term success. We know it, and we're going after it with focus and discipline. The breakdown of our current deposits is as follows: money market and savings, 34%; certificates of deposit, 25%; interest-bearing demand deposits, 20%; noninterest-bearing demand deposits, 21%. Our deposits are diversified by geographic distribution, with California accounting for 30% of total deposits, Florida at 20% and Texas at 7%, which make up the majority of our deposit portfolio, with Nevada, Hawaii and other states making up 43% of the remaining total. Since the FOMC's decision to cut rates by 50 basis points, we have seen a palpable uptick in the growth of our digital branch. The investments in its online account opening infrastructure and technology have really given us an opportunity to leverage the rate environment. The seamless instant account opening and funding with real-time risk mitigation and fraud detection is already deployed into our physical branches, being utilized for consumer accounts at first and in short order for business accounts as well. This will allow more efficient usage of FTE, while freeing up more time to focus on the high-touch needs of our business clients and the complexities of their banking relationship. As we noted last quarter, we have begun to change the culture of our physical branches to empower and incentivize employees to aggressively grow our granular core retail deposit franchise with proactive outbound participation and engagement in the community. They have risen to the challenge of being the front line and the backbone of our institution because the growth of our retail channel is integral to our resilience and continued success. For this reason and for countless more, I can tell you unequivocally that the employees of First Foundation are our greatest asset. As we grow core deposits, we're going to keep a sharp eye on concentrations across the deposit portfolio, just like we do the loan portfolio. It's not just about growth, it's about balance and discipline. This means reducing reliance on non-core and wholesale funding, along with cutting back on high-cost deposits goals we've been talking about for several quarters now. We've made solid progress, but let's be clear, we are not satisfied yet. There's more room to improve, and we're focused on getting it right. The changes we're making to the balance sheet will limit exposure to expensive deposits and profitability will improve with these adjustments. And of course, the recent rate cuts are already giving us a tailwind, with more upside if additional cuts are on the horizon whenever the Fed does decide to move again. We are fully committed to executing our strategy with precision, reducing fixed rate exposure, strengthening liquidity and expanding our core deposit base. The sale of performing loan concentrations, combined with our investments in digital infrastructure, will keep us on a path to strong profitability, while the ongoing rate cuts create new opportunities for growth. Looking ahead, our focus is clear: disciplined growth, proactive risk management and delivering long-term value for our shareholders. As we navigate these strategic shifts, we remain confident in our ability to adapt to the changing landscape and capitalize on new opportunities. But none of this happens without the incredible people we have working tirelessly every day. I want to take a moment to thank the folks on the front lines, our loan servicing group, treasury management team, digital banking team and all the unsung heroes who work behind the scenes and rarely get the recognition they deserve. Your hard work and dedication are the reason we can execute on these strategies and continue driving results for our clients and shareholders. We see you, and we appreciate everything you do. Thank you. I'll now turn it back over to Scott.