Thank you, Michael, and thank you all for calling in. Today, we will discuss our operations and topics that are top of mind. In June, the FOMC decided to keep the benchmark federal funds rate at 5.25% to 5.5% for the seventh consecutive meeting. While this prolonged high interest rate environment has severely impacted real estate capital markets, we continue to see leasing and investment activity normalize. Last week's job report, which missed expectations on job growth, coupled with a downward revised June print, has led many to believe that the US is headed toward a recession, which is one of the reasons the stock market dropped significantly in the last few days. Given the economic weakness, the Fed is under increased pressure to reduce interest rates. We believe a single rate cut is assumed by most market participants with the opportunity for one or two additional cuts by year-end. Although the economic news is negative, aside from one tenant, we have not seen a material decrease in tenant credit quality across our portfolio. As it relates to specific asset classes, we see continued outperformance in industrial for both the near and long term. In the near term, we see industrial vacancy rates peaking as new developments have slowed for the last several quarters. According to CBRE, industrial product under construction for Q2 dropped to 291.9 million square feet, the first time under construction product has been below 300 million square feet since Q2 2019. In the long term, we see significant tailwinds, driven by reshoring and near-shoring manufacturing operations, trends which will benefit our existing portfolio and play to our proven expertise underwriting middle market credits. Moving on to a few company and portfolio specific highlights for the second quarter. During the quarter, we increased our industrial concentration as a percentage of annualized straight line rent from 60% to 62% and decreased office from 36% to 34%. We successfully leased and mark-to-market nearly 1 million square feet in Taylor, Pennsylvania. We inquired an industrial asset in Southern Pennsylvania for $11.7 million with a weighted GAAP cap rate of 12.3%. We successfully sold our 29,000 square foot office asset in Egg Harbor, New Jersey. Through the second quarter, our portfolio management team has released or renewed nearly 2.4 million square feet across five assets for an aggregate $3.6 million straight line rent plus up. Through the remainder of 2024, we have just 6,600 square feet of expiring leases. We collected 100% of cash base rents and portfolio occupancy increased to 98.5%. Subsequent to the end of the quarter, we also renewed a lease on 72,000 square feet of office lease in Columbus, Ohio to the end of the year 2030. And in addition, should close shortly on a sale of two medical office building properties located in Georgia that we have held for sale. Lastly, we raised an additional $21.6 million in net proceeds from the sale of approximately 1.5 million shares of common stock and $100,000 in net proceeds from the sale of 3,200 shares of Series F preferred stock. Before turning the call over to Gary, I will highlight our plans and goals for the next 12 months. We will continue growing our industrial concentration as capital markets open up and we dispose of non-core office assets. We plan to increase this concentration above 70% of annualized straight line rent in the next six to 12 months, and we currently have one opportunity under contract for $10 million scheduled to close in the third quarter. We will continue disposing of non-core office assets. As of June 30, we had two medical offices, I just referenced, that are held for sale, and we will use the proceeds from these sales and our existing cash flow to redeploy into industrial assets. We will leverage our proprietary in-house credit underwriting expertise to capitalize on sale leaseback opportunities. Again, the sale leaseback is a hallmark of our value proposition. We will keep a healthy and flexible balance sheet. As of June 30, we have liquidity of $52.5 million, including $42.1 million of availability under our credit facility and $10.4 million in cash. We remain below 50% levered as of June 30, 2024. Successfully completing these goals will better position us for our next stage of growth, including obtaining rating and private placements and expanding our industrial portfolio in new and existing markets. I will now turn the call over to Gary Gerson, our CFO, to review our financial results for quarter and liquidity position.