Good morning, everyone, and thank you for joining us. I have several prepared opening remarks and will give you my overview of the quarter and then turn it over to Brad for additional details. I will then conclude with certain summary comments and thoughts about the future before we open it up to our Q&A. Net income was 23 million or $0.50 per diluted share in the third quarter of 2024 and return on assets is 1.63%. Third quarter 2024 return on average tangible common equity was 17.14%, and the tax equivalent efficiency ratio was 53.38%. Third quarter 2024 earnings were negatively impacted by $2 million of provision for credit losses in the absence of significant loan growth, which reduced after-tax earnings by $0.03 per diluted share. However, despite this profitability, Old Second remains exceptionally strong, and balance sheet strengthening continues with our tangible equity ratio increasing by 75 basis points linked quarter to 10.14%. Common equity Tier-1 increased to 12.86% in the third quarter, and we feel very good both about profitability and our balance sheet positioning at this point. We are pleased to announce a 20% increase in the common dividend this quarter, reflective of continuing strong profitability and a well-capitalized balance sheet. We would like to position ourselves to regularly deliver growth in the common dividend as we continue to build Old Second into one of the best banks in Chicago. Our financials continue to reflect a strong net interest margin, even as market interest rates begin to decline. Pre-provision net revenues remain stable and exceptionally strong. For the third quarter of 2024, compared to the prior year-like period, income on average earning assets increased 1.8 million or 2.5%, while interest expense on average interest-bearing liabilities increased 4.3 million or 38.4%. The increase in interest expense is rate-driven and primarily due to remixing and market pricing on certain commercial deposits. The third quarter of 2024 reflected an increase in total loans of 14.5 million from the prior linked quarter end, primarily due to growth in commercial, lease, and construction portfolios, net of payoffs on a few large credits during the quarter. Comparatively, loan growth in the third quarter of last year was 14 million, which is in line with the 2024 linked quarter's total loan growth. The historical trend in our bank is loan growth in the second and third quarters of the year due to seasonal construction and business activities. Currently, activity within loan committee is improving, but remains relatively modest to prior periods, primarily due to many customers waiting to see how market volatility, including election results, and any further interest rate reductions play out in the next three to six months. The tax equivalent net interest margin increased by 1 basis point in this quarter, driven by continuing higher rates on variable securities and loans, partially offset by higher funding costs. Loan yields reflected a 16 basis point increase during the third quarter, compared to the linked quarter, and 28 basis point increase year-over-year. Funding costs increased due to increases in both rates and growth and time deposits. The tax equivalent net interest margin was 4.64% for the third quarter of 2024, compared to 4.63% for the second quarter and 4.66% in the third quarter of last year. The net interest margin has remained relatively stable in the year-over-year period due to the impact of rising rates on both the variable portions of the loan and security portfolios, as well as the deposit base and our short-term borrowing costs. Loan-to-deposit ratio is at 89% as of September 30, compared to 88% last quarter and 87% as of September 30, 2023. As we have said in the past, our focus continues to be on balance sheet optimization. I'll let Brad talk more about that in a minute. The third quarter of 2024 saw improving asset quality metrics and moderate actions taken on substandard credits, continuing remediation trends noted primarily since late last year. Our belief remains that the fourth quarter of 2023 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 that 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 third quarter of 2024, substandard and criticized loans are down 187.6 million, which is essentially flat to last quarter and approximately 15.7 million less than year-end 2023 and more than 40% below peak levels. The expectation remains for further improvement through the rest of the year. Encouragingly, our special mention loans decreased 45.6 million or more than 37% from a year ago. We continue to expect realization of a relatively less costly resolution on a number of non-performers in the near future and remain hopeful we can recover some of those losses realized in the second half of 2023. In the third quarter of 2024, we recorded net recoveries with the allowance from credit losses on loans of 155,000 compared to net charge-offs of 5.8 million in the second quarter of this year and net charge-offs of 6.6 million in the third quarter of 2023. Prior quarter elevated net charge-off levels and continued asset remediation efforts have resulted in a more stable credit outlook on current problem loans and the good news is that classified loans continue to decline falling by almost $10 million in the third quarter with the remainder of the portfolio remaining well behaved. Continued stress testing has not raised any new red flags for us and the bulk of our loan portfolios transition into the higher rate environment and will be impacted with downward rate movements going forward. The allowance for credit losses on loans increased to 44.4 million as of September 30, 2024 or 1.11% of total loans from 42.3 million at the end of the second quarter, which was at 1.06% of loans. Unemployment and GDP forecast used in future loss rate assumptions remained fairly static from last year with a 25 basis point uptick in the unemployment assumptions on the upper end of the range based on recent Fed projections. The change in provision level quarter over linked quarter reflects the reduction in our allowance allocations on substandard loans which largely relates to the 29% reduction in criticized assets since September 30 2023. I think investors should know that with our continuing level of strong profitability we will be aggressive in addressing weak credits and we remain confident in the strength of our portfolios. Non-interest income continued to perform well with growth relatively flat in the third quarter of 2024 compared to the linked quarter and wealth management fees, service charges on deposits, card related income, and mortgage income excluding the impact of mortgage servicing rights mark-to-market. A death benefit of $893,000 was realized on one BOLI contract in the second quarter of 2024 with final true up of these proceeds in the third quarter of 2024, no like benefit was recorded in 2023. Other income increased in the third quarter of 2024 compared to the prior linked quarter and prior year like quarter due to recoveries on a vendor contract and refunds of prior servicing advances on a sole credit card portfolio. Expense discipline continues to be strong with total non-interest expense for the third quarter of 2024 at 1.4 million more than the prior linked quarter primarily due to an increase in incentive accruals and the First Merchants acquisition cost incurred of 471,000 in the third quarter. OREO expenses also increased in the third quarter of 2024 compared to the prior quarter as the second quarter included a net gain and on the sale of OREO of 259,000. Our efficiency ratio continues to be excellent as the tax equivalent and efficiency ratio adjusted to exclude acquisition costs and BOLI death benefits was 52.31% for the third quarter compared to 52.68% for the prior link quarter. As we look forward, we are focused 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 create 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. With that I'll turn it over to Brad for additional color.