Thank you, Erich, and thank you all for calling in. Today, we will discuss our operations and topics that are top of mind. Interest rates continue to have outsized impacts on capital markets and real estate. Last quarter, we noted that the 10-year U.S. Treasury had declined from 5% in October of 2023 to 4.3% as of February 2024. After a couple of hot CPI prints, the 10-year increased again to nearly 4.7% as of April 2024 and as of yesterday closed at a 4.49% number. This volatility has impacted the net lease investment volume across the industry. According to CBRE, net lease investment volume fell 51% year-over-year for full year 2023. Total commercial real estate volume fell by 52%, Sale leasebacks, which are a hallmark of our value proposition focusing on tenant credit, performed relatively better than traditional third-party acquisitions. Compared to a 52% decline in total commercial real estate volume, sale-leaseback volume fell by 21% in 2023, according to CBRE. We plan to continue leveraging our credit underwriting expertise to capitalize sale-leaseback opportunities through the remainder of 2024. In terms of specific asset classes, industrial real estate continues to perform and now accounts for 60% of our annualized straight-line rent. According to CBRE, average industrial asking rents in Q4 2023 rose 6% year-over-year, and the industrial vacancy rate at the end of the year was 4.8%. Vacancy is less, particularly in the manufacturing sector, where we see plenty of demand driven by near-shoring and reshoring initiatives and tenant stickiness. Any softness in fundamentals -- excuse me, industrial fundamentals is driven by record leases to big-box distribution centers, a sub-asset class that we largely avoid. Moving on to office. The broader market continues to struggle with early signs of bottoming out. According to JLL, office groundbreaking in Q1 2024 declined below 300,000 square feet, the lowest volume on record. We made tremendous progress through 2023 of delivering on our current core strategies, divesting noncore office assets, acquiring mission-critical industrial assets in the path of growth markets, renewing expiring leases and diligently underwriting our tenants' credit. We exited 7 noncore markets and properties located -- and completed nearly $30 million in new acquisitions and increased portfolio industrial concentration from 56% to annualized straight-line rent as of December 2022 to 60% as of December 2023. Currently, we have multiple actionable opportunities in the pipeline and 1 opportunity under contract for closing this month. These opportunities include lease renewals with increased rent and added term as well as potential dispositions. We remain disciplined, particularly on tenant credit. While we've seen a number of opportunities this year, we believe that many credits are too risky in these economic times. In addition to new acquisition, our asset management team led more than 1.4 million square feet of leases, resulting in a more than $1.26 million or 13% net increase in same-store GAAP rent. The annualized straight-line rent of these transactions totaled $10.7 million in 2023. In the first quarter of 2024, we continued to reposition our portfolio with the sale of 3 noncore office properties. And subsequent to the end of the quarter, we sold an additional noncore office property. Also subsequent to the end of the quarter, we renewed 3 leases with a weighted average term of 6.4 years and additional straight-line rent of $681,000. While we cannot control the Fed or predict exactly where interest rates may go, we remain confident that all of our developments have better positioned our portfolio for 2024 and beyond. Portfolio occupancy was at 98.9% as of March 31, 2024, and we collected 100% of cash-based rents since February 2022. This is a testament to the mission-critical nature of our assets and quality credits for our tenants, both of which position us to weather any economic storm we may face. In addition, we believe there are other levers, which we have yet to fully realize. Most of our industrial assets have fixed annual escalations in the 1.5, 3.5 range. Industrial rent growth over the last few years has exceeded these escalation rates, resulting in rents that are below market for us and are valuable upon lease renewal. Our balance sheet is healthy and flexible, positioning us to continue deploying capital into industrial deals at accretive cap rates as seller expectations normalize. Since January 1, 2022, we've repaid net $174 million of mortgage debt and grown our unencumbered asset base by over 60%. Only 6 office mortgages remain and the first maturity of these is in 2026. We have $56.1 million in available liquidity via our revolving credit facility and cash on hand, and remain below 50% levered as of March 31, 2024. We cannot predict the short-term course of interest rates, but we can expect some sort of normalization with time. As that normalization happens, we expect we will be well positioned to capitalize on accretive new opportunities. We expect sale leasebacks in particular to be a primary source of new deals. Sale leasebacks provide additional credit diligence and term, both hallmarks of our value proposition. Our balance sheet is flexible, driven by more than $174 million of net mortgage debt reduction since January 2022, and again, we have more than $56 million of liquidity on hand to continue growing our industrial base. Since 2019, our industrial concentration as a percentage of annualized straight-line rent has increased from 32% to 60% and we expect to further increase this concentration in the next 6 to 12 months. I will now turn the call over to Gary Gerson, our CFO, to review our financial results for the quarter and liquidity position.