Thank you, Thomas. Turning to Slide 10. Consistent with our expectations, the Q1 net interest margin increased by another 8 basis points to 3.04%. Recall, as we noted last quarter, the Q4 reported net interest margin of 2.97% benefited by about 5 basis points from outsized interest recoveries on resolved commercial loans, which, if adjusted for, yielded an even wider margin expansion in Q1. Margin expansion this quarter was again driven by the execution of our organic balance sheet strategies, resulting in an improved mix of both earning assets and liabilities when compared to the prior quarter averages. Additionally, and importantly, excluding the Q4 commercial loan interest recoveries just noted, loan yields were relatively unchanged in the first quarter, which is a result of the continued remixing of the loan portfolio towards higher-yielding commercial assets. The combination of these factors resulted in just a 2-basis point decline in earning asset yields in Q1, which, combined with further reductions in our deposit costs from the Q4 Fed funds cuts, drove a strong sequential widening of the net interest margin. Looking ahead, many of these same favorable dynamics are expected to persist for the balance of the year, such that we would still expect additional margin expansion as the year progresses. Recall, we previously anticipated paying down $200 million of Federal Home Loan Bank advances in late March and early April. However, you may have noted the $330 million reduction in borrowings in Q1, which was more than planned. In addition to the late March maturity, which was repaid as expected, rate volatility earlier in the quarter gave us the opportunity to pay down some advances ahead of schedule. Therefore, we would anticipate our borrowing position to remain relatively similar to March 31 balances for the remainder of the year. Finally, there continues to be a great deal of volatility in the forward rate expectations for Fed funds for the balance of the year. Our current outlook assumes two cuts in June and September. As mentioned last quarter, we do not view short-end rate changes to be a major driver of our net interest margin outlook. Rather, net interest income and margin performance will be a factor of our continued strategic execution on both sides of the balance sheet. Thus, there is no change to our outlook for full year net interest income growth to be in the mid-teens. Slide 11 provides a profile of the remaining investment securities and projected cash flows and yield roll-off for the coming year. As has been the case for a while now, we do not intend to reinvest cash flows in 2025. Rather, we will continue to use those proceeds to fund organic relationship-based commercial loan growth. As you can see on Slide 12, reported noninterest income included the previously disclosed $7 million gain on the sale of our mortgage warehouse business, which closed in January, as well as a small loss on the sale of a single corporate bond. Excluding those items and the loss on sale of securities in Q4, noninterest income declined modestly from the prior quarter, mainly related to normal seasonal declines in interchange fees. That said, when compared with the year-ago period, we are pleased to see generally favorable results in many of our key client-facing items, such as mortgage, interchange, and fiduciary activity, and stability in our service charges. Our outlook for 2025 remains unchanged for growth in the low single digits. This comparison excludes the securities losses in both 2024 and 2025 and the $7 million gain in the first quarter. On Slide 13, you can see it was a strong expense quarter for the company as the successful execution of our Q4 efforts led to the sequential decline in Q1, in line with expectations. Total expenses were $39.3 million, which included $305,000 of expense directly related to the warehouse sale. As anticipated, given the previously discussed items that impacted Q4 results, we experienced a nice sequential decline in salaries and benefits and outside services expense, which should now approximate a go-forward run rate for these key expense lines. While we are pleased with this quarter's results, our work is not done, and we understand the need to control expenses as we rightsize the balance sheet. As such, we continue to expect full year 2025 expense growth to be flat to up low single digits. Turning to capital on Slide 14. The positive momentum of the last few quarters continued again this quarter with strong linked quarter increases in all capital ratios and tangible book value per share. The increases were driven by organic profitability, the realized gain on the warehouse business, and the strategic repositioning of the balance sheet, which has restricted growth in risk-weighted assets and total assets. Going forward, further improvement in the company's capital ratios is expected given our outlook for stronger profitability and a continued disciplined approach to balance sheet growth. While we are constantly evaluating the investment of this capital with the goal being to put any excess to work in the most accretive and risk-averse ways while adding to the long-term franchise value of the company. Finally, turning to Slide 15. In short, there is no change to our full year outlook, and we continue to expect 2025 to represent a significant step forward for the company, both in terms of recurring and predictable operating profitability and momentum in our core operations. There are a few items I'd like to highlight. Our expectations for growth in loans held for investment are unchanged in the mid-single-digit range for the year. This is net of the continued runoff of indirect auto, which should total about $100 million for the full year. Deposit growth expectations remain unchanged in the low single digits, but with a slightly different mix, modestly more time deposit growth and less commercial growth versus prior expectations. Under our base set of assumptions, which now includes 2.25 basis point Fed fund cuts in June and September, our net interest income growth expectations for the full year 2025 remain unchanged in the mid-teens. Total reported expenses for 2025 are still expected to be flat to up low single digits relative to the reported full year 2024 and the full year effective tax rate for 2025 is still expected to be in the mid-teens. And with that, I'll turn the presentation back over to Thomas.