Good morning, and thank you for joining us. As customary, I have several prepared opening remarks and will give my overview of the quarter and then turn it over to Brad for additional color. I will then conclude with certain summary comments and thoughts about the future, before we open it up for questions. Net income was $21.3 million or $0.47 per diluted share in the first quarter. Return on assets was 1.51%, and first quarter 2024 return on average tangible common equity was 17.8%, and the tax equivalent efficiency ratio of 3.09%. First quarter earnings were negatively impacted by $3.5 million of provision for credit losses, which reduced after-tax earnings by $0.06 per share. However, profitability Old Second remains exceptionally strong and balance sheet strengthening continues with our tangible common equity ratio increasing by 51 basis points linked quarter to 9.04%. Common equity Tier 1 crossed 12% this quarter, and we feel very good about profitability and our balance sheet positioning at this point. Our financials continue to be positively impacted by higher market interest rates. Pre-provision net revenues remained stable and exceptionally strong. For the first quarter of 2024 compared to the prior like year period, income on earning assets increased $3.2 million or 4.5%, while interest expense increased $7.5 million. The increase in both cases is rate driven. However, exception pricing and certain commercial deposits as well as growth in average balances, other short-term borrowings compared to the prior year like period caused a net decrease in net interest margin, which is attributable to both interest rate and volume factors on the liability side. First quarter 2024 reflected a decrease in total loans of $73.5 million from the prior linked quarter end, primarily due to a few payoffs on some large credits towards the end of the quarter. The historical trend for our bank is really softer first quarter of originations due to limited new projects and construction during the winter season. 2023 was an anomaly as the savvy commercial customers realized interest rates were about to increase and sought funding prior to those market rate increases in late first quarter 2023. Our loan growth was much larger in the year ago like period compared to the first quarter of 2024. Activity within our loan committee remains modest relative to prior periods due to both the higher interest rate environment, lower demand and seasonal impacts. Our net interest margin compressed slightly this quarter, driven by higher funding cost. Loan yields reflected a 7 basis point increase during the first quarter compared to the linked quarter and 37 basis points increase year-over-year. Funding costs increased due to the increases in both rates and growth and time deposit balances. The tax equivalent net interest margin was 4.58% for the first quarter compared to 4.62% for the fourth quarter and 4.74% in the first quarter of 2023. The net interest margin decreased 16 basis points in the year-over-year quarter due to the impact of rising rates on the cost of funds, which is partially mitigated by growth in interest income driven by the variable portion of the loan and securities portfolio. The loan-to-deposit ratio is 86% at March 31, 2024, compared to 88% last quarter and 82% a year ago. As we said last quarter, our focus continues to be balance sheet optimization, and I'll let Brad talk about more of that in a minute. First quarter of 2024 reflected stable asset quality metrics and much more moderate actions taken on substandard credits compared to the fourth quarter of 2023. Our hope and belief remains that the prior quarter represented an inflection point in our credit trends. Old Second began substantially downgrading large amounts of commercial real estate loans, including office and health care at the end of 2021 and accelerating through 2022. Substandard and criticized loans went from approximately $60 million or a little more than 1% of loans at third quarter of 2021 to a peak of nearly $300 million or over 7% of loans in the first quarter of 2023. As of the end of the first quarter of 2024, substandard and criticized loans are down to $200 million which is approximately $3.2 million less than year-end 2023, and the trend expectation remains for further improvement through the remainder of the year. Encouragingly, our special mention loans are now at their lowest level in over 2 years. We continue to expect realization of a relatively less costly resolution on a number of nonperformers in the near future, and we remain hopeful we can recover some of the losses realized in the second half of 2023. The reality is that commercial real estate valuations are heavily dependent upon the market level of interest rates as a primary determinant of cash flows for a given property. A movement in rates such as we have seen, is substantial enough to significantly impair the equity positions and a large percentage of commercial real estate credits. Additionally, the residual stress brought upon by the pandemic in office and health care is not abated. We believe we are being proactive and realistic in addressing commercial real estate loans facing deterioration from higher interest rates, declining appraisal values and cash flow pressures. As we discussed last quarter on the call and consistent with our expectations, we recorded net charge-offs of $3.7 million in the quarter, one specific current period charge-off of $3.9 million on a previously allocated loan was partially offset by approximately $159,000 of net recoveries during the first quarter. The one charge-off was due to the receipt of an updated appraisal on health care property. The good news is that criticized and classified loans are declining, and the remainder of the portfolio remains well behaved. Continued stress testing and renewal rates has not raised any new red flags for us and the bulk of our loan portfolio has transitioned and is seasoning into a higher rate environment. Being short duration on the asset side has obviously helped us immensely in terms of interest rate risk management, but probably put us at the forefront in terms of commercial real estate stress. The belief is reinforced by the experience that a significant percentage of our substandard loans are acquired secondary participations. The allowance for credit losses on loans decreased to $44.1 million as of March 31, 2024, or 1.1% of total loans from $44.3 million at year-end 2023, which was also 1.1% of total loans. Unemployment and GDP forecast using the future loss rate assumptions remained fairly static from last quarter. The change in provision level quarter-over-linked quarter, reflects the reduction in our allowance allocations on substandard loans, which largely relates to the 31% reduction in criticized assets since March 31st of 2023. I think investors should know that we are continuing with the level of strong profitability, and we will be aggressive in addressing weak credits and that we remain confident in the strength of our portfolios. Noninterest income continued to perform well with growth noted quarter over linked quarter and BOLI and mortgage banking income. BOLI income bounced back from a weak fourth quarter due to changes in market conditions, Mortgage banking income increased $1.3 million quarter-over-linked quarter, primarily due to the minimal MSR gains recorded in the first quarter of '24 compared to MSR losses of $1.3 million for the prior quarter. Expense discipline continues to be strong with the usual seasonal uptick noted in the first quarter of 2024 compared to the prior linked quarter, primarily due to the annual increase in wage rates as well as growth in payroll-related taxes and 401(k) company match due to payout and employee-related annual incentives in the first quarter of 2024. In addition, our occupancy costs have increased quarter over the linked quarter due to the rollout of multiple updated branches at our corporate office. Our efficiency ratio continues to be excellent. As we look forward, we're continuing on doing more of the same, which is managing liquidity, building capital and also building commercial loan origination capability for the long term. The goal is obviously to continue to build towards a more stable long-term balance sheet mix, featuring more loans and less securities in order to maintain the returns on equity commensurate with our recent performance. I'll now turn it over to Brad for additional color in his comments.