Thank you, Michael, and thank you all for calling in. Today, we will discuss economic and portfolio topics that are top of mind. The country is going through a transitional period economically, which has affected the commercial property markets. Although remote work and lingering effects of the pandemic have weakened the office property market, the industrial property markets remain strong. As we continue to pivot to a higher percentage of industrial assets by divesting non-core office assets, we are lowering our exposure to office market and de-risking our portfolio. I would like to highlight several positive developments. Our overall portfolio remains stable and strong and we continue to see attractive acquisition candidates. Further, we continue to have success with re-tenanting and capital recycling into industrial assets. With these facts in mind, let me move on to a discussion covering the results of the last quarter, provide some comments on the state of the portfolio and market outlook before turning the call over to Gary Gerson, our CFO, to review financial results for the period and our capital and liquidity positions. During the second quarter of 2023, we continued our focus on industrial acquisitions and improving operations. We acquired a 76,000 square foot industrial manufacturing facility in Riverdale, Illinois at a GAAP capitalization rate of 9.7%, fully leased our 119,224 square foot office building in Fort Lauderdale, Florida for 11.1 years, executed a lease with a sub-tenant of our 125,682 square foot industrial property in Milwaukee, Wisconsin for 10 years through 2038. We extended the lease of our 220 -- excuse me, 220,500 square foot Monroe, Michigan industrial facility for an additional five years, extended lease at our 13,919 square foot Cumming, Georgia medical office building for an additional five years, extended the 22,031 square foot lease at our Burnsville, Minnesota industrial property by additional 5.4 years and we sold a 12,070 foot -- square foot office property in Baytown, Texas outside Houston. We also sold a 30,850 square foot office property in Birmingham, Alabama. Subsequent to the end of the quarter, we acquired a 7,714 square foot medical property in Burleson, Texas with a 10-year lease in place. We acquired a 100,000 square foot industrial manufacturing distribution facility in Cedar Hill, Texas for $9.1 million in a 20-year sale leaseback transaction at a GAAP cap rate of 10.1%. We sold 26,080 foot -- square foot office building in Pittsburgh PA for $6.75 million, resulting in a gain on sale of $3.6 million. We extended the lease on our Wilmington, North Carolina industrial property until June 30, 2037. And we extended the lease of 51,940 square feet at our new Albany, Ohio office property by additional five years. These investments, dispositions and re-leasing activity further reinforce our strategy to increase our portfolio's industrial allocation and improved property operations. Our acquisitions volumes since 2019 has exceeded $487 million and 99% of the acquisitions have been industrial in nature. Our industrial allocation based on straight-line rent has increased from 32% to 59% during this period, while pure office allocation has been reduced to 37%. The team's near-term objective is to reach an industrial allocation of at least 60% within the next six to 12 months. And we continue to have success with acquisitions in the 50,000 to 300,000 square foot range with the predominance of sale leasebacks, and we expect to continue this focus. Now I'd like to comment on the portfolio. Our asset management team continues to deliver on improving our same store operations. Q2 2023 over Q2 2022 same store lease revenues increased by 9.5%. We are also continuing our capital recycling efforts in order to redeploy sale proceeds into industrial assets. Our rent collections continue to be strong. 100% of cash rents were collected through July and we are very pleased with our portfolio and with our tenants’ performance during these challenging times for all industries. It is appropriate to mention that the average GAAP cap rate on our three acquisitions year-to-date was 9.56%, which is very accretive to our shareholders. The potential acquisitions currently in our pipeline are above 8.5%. Uncertainty and volatility continued in the second quarter of 2023 within the economy and financial markets. As a result of higher interest rates and tightened credit standards, transaction volumes are down by over 60% year-over-year and the disconnect between buyers and sellers, as it relates to pricing expectations, continued throughout the second quarter. The industrial sector normalized in the second quarter of 2023 relative to last two record setting years in ‘21, ‘22. However, overall fundamentals remain sound and the sector continues to outperform other asset classes. The increase in cost of high yield debt and leverage loans has made sale leasebacks an attractive source of capital for private equity backed businesses, and an increasing number of firms are exploring it as a financing alternative. The Fed rate continued on its path of raising interest rates by 0.25% in July meeting, signaling that the Fed will look for lower levels of inflation before determining peak rate levels. With inflation moderating to its lowest year-over-year increase since March of '21, the economy is showing the effects of a rapid rate hikes and tightening credit standards over the past 18 months. Companies continued to push return to work policies in the second quarter. Meta, formerly Facebook, and Lyft, announced office mandates in the second quarter which now means that the top 10 US technology tenants all have some form of hybrid attendance policies. Additionally, federal agencies continue to implement policies for their employees to return to the office. Approximately 1.5 million office-based employees have had new attendance policies take effect in 2023 and another 1 million will face return to office mandates that will take effect through the end of the year. New office development activity has decreased significantly due to high material cost, decreased demand and increased cost of capital. Just 5 million square feet of office has broken ground year-to-date, potentially providing much needed supply constraints in high quality office for years to come. US is seeing a high record of office properties removed from the market for demolition, redevelopment, or conversion to other property types. Our firm continues to successfully execute on the disposition of non-core office buildings. As it relates to our acquisition opportunities, we continue to see a reduction in sales listing activity, primarily from third party leases. And investment sales brokers are indicating that the number of acquisition candidates on a per property basis has been reduced. We have seen cap rate expansion in the market due to the continued rise in interest rates and cost of debt, and new sponsors exploring sale leaseback transactions. Our current pipeline of acquisition candidates is approximately [Technical Difficulty] in volume, representing 25 properties. [Technical Difficulty] properties, two have LOIs out for consideration and the balance are under review. Our team is staying actively engaged in our markets and we believe acquisition opportunities will continue to arise as we can -- that we can and will pursue. So, in summary, our second quarter activities reflected continued strong leasing and rental collection success, continued active engagements to identify industrial acquisition opportunities and have collectively positioned us well to pursue growth opportunities. Now, let me turn it over to Gary, our CFO, for a report on the financial results, including our capital market activities. Gary?