Thanks, Dave. Good afternoon, everyone, and thank you for joining us. In this call, I'll cover 3 topics: first, introductory comments on recent changes, actions taken at the company and my initial impressions; second, our priorities and focus going forward; and third, expectations for our performance both for FY '24 and longer term. I'll then turn it over to Dave to discuss our results and look forward to wrapping up with Q&A. Before diving in, I wanted to take a moment to recognize the efforts of the Mercury team. Their demonstrated resilience over time and their dedication and commitment to serving our clients in their important missions. As we've discussed throughout the company, with our recent announcements, we are on a very clear path to unlock the intrinsic value of Mercury for our customers, shareholders and employees through enhanced operational focus. As a team, we realized that what we need to do is within our control, and we all recognize that's a great place to be. Please turn to Slide 4. Let me start by summarizing some of the recent changes at the company. At the end of Q4, the Board concluded its review of strategic alternatives and implemented several important changes to put Mercury on a path of enhanced execution of our strategy. Over the past 2 months, the Board has made positive governance changes, appointing Roger Krone and Jerry DeMuro to the Board, both well-respected industry veterans with CEO experience and appointing Scott Ostfeld to the Board, who brings an important shareholder perspective. I have known these 3 individuals for a number of years, and I'm delighted to have them on the board. In addition, the Board affected a smooth leadership transition with the valuable addition of Dave Farnsworth a seasoned defense technology leader as Chief Financial Officer. And with today's announcement, I am humbled and excited that the Board has placed its faith in me to lead Mercury through its next phase of value creation. We have significant work ahead of us, and I'm confident based on what I've seen over the last year as a Board member and more recently as interim CEO that we can and will make tangible progress toward predictable, profitable organic growth with improved cash conversion in fiscal '24 and beyond. I also want to take a moment to thank Bill O'Brien for his 15 years of service to Mercury and for his significant leadership in navigating through this recent transition period as Chairman of the Board. Before I go too far, I'll give you a little background on myself. I began my career as an aerospace engineer designing and building high-powered communication satellites for government and commercial applications around the world, supporting demanding missions and delivering very complex satellite systems. One of my key takeaways from that experience was that as a young engineer, I didn't need to worry about things outside of my control. I realized that if I just came to work every day, focused on solving the customers hard technical problems better than anybody else, being a good teammate, doing the right thing and delivering programs on cost and schedule, everything else would take care of itself. Customers would be happy, shareholders would be happy, and as employees, we would have a lot of fun outperforming our competitors. That was about the first decade of my career. And over the last 20 years, I've led a number of aerospace, defense and technology businesses. Like Mercury, many of these businesses had great fundamentals, but needed renewed focus to restore and drive strong shareholder returns. In each of these situations, I've worked with high-performing teams to drive a culture of relentless focus on enhanced execution that led to significant value creation and returns for shareholders. This experience, combined with my knowledge of this leadership team and Mercury's superb positioning in the market, gives me the utmost confidence that we will be successful in realizing the inherent growth, profitability, cash flow and ultimately, value of this national asset. Since taking on the interim CEO role on June 26, I spent significant time with the team digging into the details of the business in forming an assessment of Mercury and its value creation potential. Specifically, I have visited our major centers of operation and personally led reviews of our challenged programs and expanded those reviews to include 100% of our current development programs, their estimated cost to complete and any roadblocks or risk to completion. I've engaged with the growth organization to review the health of our new business pipeline and our approach to accelerate organic growth. The leadership team and I have rapidly assessed our cost structure, taking initial actions to rightsize our organization and improve margins in fiscal '24 and beyond. And as a leadership team, we have reviewed our major unbilled receivables balances by program and our inventory in detail to establish burn-down plans and drive improved free cash flow conversion. Please turn to Slide 5. Based on the last year plus that I served on the board and my work recently with the team, here are my initial impressions and takeaways. First impression, Mercury's strategy is sound. We are a national asset in the defense industrial base. At a macro level, we are positioned in an attractive growth market, Defense Electronics. And more importantly, we are situated in the right parts of that market that are experiencing spending growth. At a micro level, we are designed in with sole-source positions on critical defense programs poised for significant electronic modernization. And finally, with enhanced customer focus and execution excellence, Mercury will continue to benefit from increased outsourcing by our defense prime customers. All these factors give me confidence in our ability to grow faster than the market. Second impression, over the past several years, the company grew inorganically into strategically attractive areas, but didn't fully integrate some of the businesses and mature processes and management systems to align with Mercury's evolving business portfolio. In my experience, this is not uncommon in businesses that grow rapidly via acquisitions. At Mercury, though, the immaturity and lack of full integration of key functional areas have led to the serious challenges the company experienced forecasting business performance over the past several quarters. That said, maturing in these areas is doable within our control and underway. My third and most important takeaway is that while our recent results are disappointing, the majority of our business is performing well, delivering predictable and profitable growth. However, this solid performance has been masked by approximately 20 programs that are experiencing unique and outsized costs primarily temporary cost growth related to initial development challenges. In fiscal '23, these few programs impacted our financial performance by approximately $56 million. Said differently, our reported margin in 2023 does not at all reflect a structural shift in our margin profile. It is the composite of a very predictable and profitable core business obscured by an atypically large mix of development programs and cost challenges on a subset of programs that are resolvable and temporary in nature. And looking beyond our recent results, I'm encouraged by 3 factors: first, the majority of our business is performing very well; second, the temporary execution challenges that are masking this performance are occurring on a small subset of programs, most of which are development in nature and are all solvable; and third, the current larger than normal mix of development programs reflects the potential for increased highly predictable and profitable business as the programs transition into production. With those introductory comments, I'd like to now transition to our priorities and focus going forward. So please turn to Slide 6. Our enhanced focus on execution includes 4 priority areas: first, delivering predictable results through improved execution on challenged programs; second, building a thriving organic growth engine that leverages our unique strategic positioning; third, expanding margins through a rationalized cost structure and improved program gross margins; and fourth, driving improved free cash flow conversion and near-term cash release. These priorities are central to unlocking the intrinsic value in the business. Let me provide some additional color on how we're approaching each of them: first, on delivering predictable results. In assessing our program portfolio, our core business consisting of franchise production programs as well as a large portfolio of performing development programs is healthy and deliver solid gross margins, which gives me a lot of confidence in our long-term business model. Currently, there are 2 factors that have pressured and added variability to our recent results. First, as discussed in Q3, we have been successful winning a number of development programs that has led to a shift in our program mix from 20% development programs in FY '21 to 40% development programs in FY '23. We know this mix shift is temporary in nature and a positive leading indicator of future growth as our development programs are a precursor to higher-margin, long-term production contracts. But given that our development programs typically run at approximately 1,000 basis points lower gross margin than our production programs, we have experienced near-term margin pressure tied to this mix shift. Second, as I mentioned earlier, because our management systems and processes have not matured at the same pace as our growth over the last several years to address the complexities inherent in many of these development programs A small number of programs have become challenged, leading to unanticipated and temporary impacts on our overall performance. In FY '23, execution challenges on approximately 20 programs a majority of which are development in nature, drove approximately $56 million of impact or approximately 580 basis points of margin contraction. We are squarely focused on mitigating the effects from the challenge programs, completing them and transitioning them into production. We have strengthened our program reviews on development programs with increased frequency and internal rigor and tightened program management accountability to drive better performance. Two of these programs moved into production in Q4, 5 more have or are expected to transition in H1, with the majority completing throughout FY '24. While I can't promise we are done seeing the impacts from the challenged programs on our results, I can say that these execution challenges are resolvable, temporary in nature and the full force of the organization is focused on overcoming them. As we make progress through the year and as we return toward a more typical program mix, I believe the profitability of the core business will begin to become visible as we progress through FY '24. And finally, even at the increased levels of investment associated with the challenged programs I'm confident that we'll see a high return on those programs as they transition from onetime development to ongoing long-term profitable production runs. Our second focus area, delivering consistent industry-leading organic growth requires the tube growth engine that is bidding and winning new contracts at an appropriate level given our scale after years of inorganic growth. Our book-to-bill has averaged slightly above 1.0 over the past 8 quarters, which isn't adequate to meet our growth aspirations. Going forward, we are focused on driving a higher book-to-bill, which will help meet our long-term growth objectives and above-market growth rates, reflecting our attractive market positioning. Sizing upward growth engine will take some time, but the good news is that we aren't opportunity constrained given our market positioning. I've had the opportunity to successfully work through similar growth scaling exercises several times in my career to accelerate organic growth. There is a consistent progression associated with targeting pipeline and levels of bid activity as leading indicators to revenue growth. We are beginning that work today led by our growth organization, and while it will take time to translate into revenue, I am confident that a healthy growth engine, combined with Mercury's strong positioning will lead to industry-leading organic growth. Our third area of focus is margin expansion through targeted improvements to both our operating expense and gross margin. As mentioned earlier, we have taken initial actions to simplify our organizational structure, facilitate clearer accountability and aligning to our priorities, including embedding impact processes and execution into the business, streamlining our organizational structure and removing areas of redundancy between corporate and divisional organizations; and reducing SG&A headcount and rebalancing discretionary and third-party spend. This first set of actions will generate approximately $24 million in annual run rate cost savings, including approximately $20 million to $22 million of net benefit to FY '24. These savings are reflected in our FY '24 outlook, which Dave will discuss shortly. In the near term, we are evaluating additional efforts to drive further efficiencies in SG&A, R&D investment and manufacturing footprint, among others. Our fourth focus area is driving improved free cash flow conversion and cash release. Over the past 2 fiscal years, Mercury has delivered $333 million of adjusted EBITDA, but generated negative $107 million in free cash flow, which is clearly unacceptable. Since FY '20, working capital has grown from approximately 35% of revenue to approximately 65% of revenue in FY '23. This growth has primarily been driven by increases in unbilled receivables and inventory and is a direct result of the temporary execution challenges previously discussed. Our focus in this area is as follows: First, resolve execution challenges and ship and bill against legacy program unbilled balances. Second, continue to improve asset efficiency in our new overtime revenue programs through cash neutral or positive terms and tighter alignment of manufacturing cycles with customer deliveries. And third, better align the receipt of inventory with our manufacturing execution cycles and pursue advanced funding for material where possible. We believe these actions will help return the company to historic levels of net working capital representing a future cash release opportunity of approximately $300 million or more over time. With that description of our focus going forward, I'd now like to discuss our expectations for both our long-term business model and guidance for FY '24. Please turn to Slide 7. Looking at our model and focusing on margins considering recent history. With 2023 as a reference point, as we improve our program execution and resolve our challenge programs, we will remove approximately 580 basis points of headwind in our margins, which is partially offset on a go-forward basis by approximately $22 million or 230 basis points related to annual incentive plan bonus that was not paid in FY '23 due to underperformance. Based on recent actions to improve our cost structure, we see another 250 basis points of benefit. We also expect to return to a more normal mix of production versus development programs over time, which will have a natural margin uplift given the 1,000 basis points lower average gross margins on development programs. Assuming we return to our historical 80-20 mix of production versus development programs, we could experience an additional 200 basis points of margin expansion, demonstrating a clear path to 22% adjusted EBITDA margins over time. Beyond that, we have several additional levers to drive margin. We will continue to focus on program execution, not only on our development programs, but on our already profitable production programs to drive gross margin improvement. We're looking at IRAD efficiency through prioritization and return thresholds. And given our unique strategic positioning and focus on growing faster than the market, we should see operating leverage with accelerated organic growth. Netting all of that together, while we have more work to do prior to communicating specific long-term targets for Mercury, I do see a clear path back to predictable organic growth that delivers mid-20% adjusted EBITDA margins and strong free cash flow conversion. I look forward to coming back to investors later in the fiscal year to review our progress to date and provide more insight into our long-term financial targets. Turning now to our outlook for FY '24 on Slide 8. While we have taken and will continue to take actions to improve predictability, organic growth, margins and cash flow, fiscal '24 will be a transition year. Consistent with our go-forward philosophy to deliver on our financial commitments, build credibility and drive long-term shareholder value, we are taking a more conservative approach to guidance for the year. Dave will discuss our guidance in detail, but at a high level, we expect flat revenue at the midpoint with margin improvement throughout the year. While we're not providing quarterly guidance, I will say that Q1, which is a seasonally low quarter, is expected to be below Q1 last year's revenue and adjusted EBITDA with negative cash flow. As we continue to work through execution challenges and enhance our visibility through management system and process improvements, we anticipate improved profitability in the second half and positive cash flow for the year. While we are taking a cautious approach to guidance, I want to reiterate that our business model is sound, and I have not seen any challenges that are not resolvable with proper focus and execution mindset and ultimately, enhanced management processes and systems. With that, I'll turn it over to Dave to walk through the financial results for the quarter and the year, and I look forward to taking your questions. Dave?