Thank you, Marty. Good morning, everyone. At the start of the year, we guided to low single-digit loan growth and indicated that we believe we've reached a bottom on margin. That held true as we achieved net interest margin stability in the first quarter and a lift in the second. We reported NIM on a fully taxable equivalent basis, 287 basis points for the second quarter of 2024, up 9 basis points from 278 in the linked first quarter. Interest-earning asset yields increased 7 basis points, while the overall cost of funds declined 2 basis points. Net interest income of $41.2 million for the second quarter was up $1.1 million from the first quarter of 2024. Margin expansion and net interest income growth has come as we've been able to reinvest cash flows into higher-yielding originations. Year-to-date actual cash flow from the loan portfolio was about $428 million. All originations were $448 million. This is a bit lighter than what we've modeled for the first half of the year, but not significantly. Through the first half of the year, loan originations have come on with net yields above 8%, replacing loans rolling off at an average yield of about 6.65%. Furthermore, Cash flow from our investment securities portfolio continues to provide opportunities to improve overall yield on the balance sheet. Looking out over the second half of the year, we're budgeting about $550 million in total cash flow from our loan and securities portfolio, providing ample opportunity to drive margin expansion. For the next 12 months, we continue to expect more than $1 billion in total cash flow. As Marty mentioned, the linked quarter decline in deposits was largely due to seasonal outflows in our public, our municipal portfolio, along with a reduction in broker CDs, while we continue to experience disintermediation into higher cost time deposits in the ongoing higher rate environment. We were able to reduce short-term borrowings and broker deposits late in the first quarter, which brought our overall cost of funds down between periods. And looking at our total deposit portfolio, relative to the magnitude of FOMC rate increases that occurred in 2022 and 2023, we have experienced a cycle-to-date beta of 48%. Excluding the cost of time deposits, the non-maturity deposit portfolio had a beta of 29%. Given FOMC expectations and internal modeling, we expect the trajectory of cost of funds to continue to flow throughout 2024. Noninterest income totaled $24 million in the first quarter, up $13.1 million on a linked-quarter basis as we reported a $13.5 million gain on sale in the current quarter related to our insurance subsidiary transaction. Excluding this gain, noninterest income of $10.5 million was down only $407,000 quarter-over-quarter as increases in several areas partially offset the decline in insurance revenue. The results for the second quarter exclude all operations of the insurance agency, which was sold on April 1. We placed the historic tax credit investment with the New York State refundable component into service in the second quarter that resulted in a $406,000 net gain compared to a net loss of $375,000 in the linked first quarter. With the large majority of committed projects and service. We expect it will be several quarters before we have capacity through meaningful investments and additional tax credits. Income from limited partnerships increased $461,000, driven by the favorable performance of underlying investments, and swap fees more than doubled from the linked quarter of $203,000 due to increased back-to-back swap activity in the second quarter. Revenue from Courier Capital, our wealth management firm with $3 billion in assets under management, along with our branch delivered retail wealth offering, totaled a combined $2.8 million in the second quarter, up $197,000 or 7.6% in the first quarter. Positive trends in the overall market were the primary driver of this growth. Noninterest expense was $33 million in the second quarter of 2024 compared to $54 million in the linked period. Excluding fraud event-related expenses from both periods, noninterest expense declined $2.2 million or 6.2%. This was primarily due to lower salaries and employee benefits expenses as a result of our April 1 insurance subsidiary sale, lower occupancy and equipment costs due to seasonality in our markets relative to snowplowing charges, and lower professional services expenses. We recorded a provision for credit losses of $2 million in the second quarter of 2024 compared to a benefit of $5.5 million in the first quarter. As a reminder, indirect delinquencies impact the qualitative factor of our model and are purely quantitative in nature, corresponding to a range of delinquencies in the portfolio over the look-back period since 2006. You'll recall we saw a considerable reduction in indirect delinquencies between year-end 2023 and March 31, 2024, which drove improvement in the qualitative factor and contributed to the first quarter 2024 reserve release. As delinquencies are a leading indicator of charge-offs, we saw a notable reduction in indirect net charge-offs in the second quarter of 2024, at just $844,000 or an annualized 38 basis points of average loans in this portfolio. While indirect delinquencies ticked up a bit in the second quarter, contributing to our reserve build in the recent period, they remain 38% less than where they were at year-end. We continue to expect overall charge-off follow within our guided annual range. Income tax expense was $4.5 million in the quarter, representing an effective tax rate of 15%. Our accumulated other comprehensive loss was $125.8 million at June 30, 2024, a decrease of about $490,000 from March 31. We reported a TCE ratio at June 30 of 6.41% and tangible common book value per share $25.17. Excluding the AOCI impact, the TCE ratio and tangible common book value per share would have been 8.27% and $32.44, respectively. We continue to expect these metrics to return to more normalized levels over time given the high credit quality and cash flow nature of our investment portfolio. I will now provide an update on our guidance for the second half of 2024. We now expect the 2024 effective tax rate to fall with a range of 11% to 13%, including the impact of the fraud event in the first quarter, the SDN sale in the second quarter, and the additional tax credit investments placed in service in the current quarter and recent years. The noninterest income and expense guidance we shared on our April investor call to reflect the sale of SDN remains unchanged, including recurring quarterly noninterest income of $8.5 million to $9 million and noninterest expense of $33 million to $34 million per quarter. This guidance excludes income related to investment tax credits limited partnerships and gains or losses on investment securities and assets, including from the SDN sale. At this time, we are also maintaining our previous guidance on loan and deposit growth of between 1% to 3%, net interest margin of between 285 to 295 basis points, and full year net charge-offs within our annualized historical range of 30 to 40 basis points. That concludes my prepared remarks and updated guidance. I'll now turn the call back to Marty.