Thank you, Sarah, and thank you to everyone joining us today. We started the year with strong operating performance, building off the momentum of a record year in 2022. I'm going to start my remarks by addressing current market conditions and then transition to our first quarter performance. We continue to see market dynamics shift, given the uncertainty in the U.S. economy and increased concerns over the banking sector. We know that both challenges and opportunities exist in every economic environment. Our business model and platform at Trinity are built to thrive in stronger markets and perform well through difficult ones. Since our last call, we have seen the closures of Silicon Valley Bank and Signature Bank as well as the acquisition of First Republic Bank. SVB particularly hits the Trinity team close to home as we have both partnered with and, to a lesser degree, competed against them for many years. We have a great deal of respect for the business they created and the people that built it. We are disappointed to see these institutions shutter, but are pleased with the actions that the FDIC took to protect depositors and customers connected with these banks. While the absence of these banks has a short-term effect on the venture ecosystem, that impact is mostly related to banking services and receivable type financing, a void that other banks are already stepping in to fill. As secured non-bank lenders, Trinity and our industry peers will remain the primary source of term debt lending to the VC ecosystem. We are well-positioned to meet the emerging needs of strong VC and other institutional backed companies. Despite recent disruption, the VC industry is strong and able to navigate the current macro environment. While headlines will focus on recent year-over-year comparisons in venture equity funding, fundraising commitments are still at pre-pandemic levels. Strong companies are receiving equity support and funding period. Trinity's portfolio companies are demonstrating this fact. Year-to-date, more than 25 of our portfolio companies have received over $1 billion of new equity. While we are seeing worthy companies get funding, we do want to note that it is typically at lower valuations. Equity support at any evaluation is an overall positive for Trinity and its loan portfolio. The funding that our portfolio companies are securing ensures that they can perform on any outstanding obligations to us. And if down rounds persist; debt financing remains a crucial solution for venture-backed companies that want to continue to fund growth without dilution. At Trinity, we have made it our goal to only finance the companies that should and will continue to get support from their equity investors in any market. This means that we are highly selective. To put that into perspective, we generally fund only about 5% of the opportunities that we see. We have a rigorous due diligence process that will continue in today's operating environment. Turning to credit. Our portfolio has stabilized and strengthened. During the quarter, our overall internal risk rating remained constant at 2.8. When you look at historical loss rates, Trinity has been consistent over its 16-year history at approximately 24 basis points annually. When you factor in realized gains, loss rates are a net positive. We take a proactive approach to managing our portfolio. Trinity's dedicated portfolio management team monitors our investments on a day-to-day basis, communicates with all of our portfolio companies and participates in our quarterly valuation process. In Q1, our NAV increased by $10 million, in part due to the stability of our portfolio. We have recently heard concerns over NAV decline in the BDC space. In 2022, similar to our BDC peers, we experienced a decline in NAV due to the unrealized losses attributed to multiple interest rate changes, market volatility, and some specific valuation adjustments. Additionally, we had an unusual event in Q1, in which we converted a prior year unrealized appreciation on two public company investments into a historic $50 million net realized gain that resulted in a decline in NAV of approximately $0.67 per share because of that flip. I also would like to remind our investors that $0.60 of the NAV decline in 2022 was related to the special dividends we paid to our shareholders. We have begun, and we believe we will continue to grow our NAV in the long-term. Our loan portfolio should recover markdowns due to interest rate movements as we hold our loans to maturity. We also seek to recover losses from market volatility and valuation adjustments over time as we continue to work with our portfolio companies during market uncertainty to garner full recoveries. Since becoming a BDC in January of 2020, we have paid out over $5 per share in dividends to our shareholders, and we've generated over 5% NAV growth. We view generating strong returns for our shareholders while achieving NAV appreciation life-to-date as a BDC is a good reason to be optimistic about the future for Trinity. Now I'd like to turn to a few key highlights from our first quarter performance. Q1 net investment income was $19 million or NII per share of $0.55, providing 117% coverage on our core dividend. Meaningful undistributed NII as of Q1 will be reinvested into our business, both supporting our current portfolio companies and used to fund new commitments. We increased our quarterly dividend by over 2% to $0.47 per share, marking the ninth consecutive quarter that we have increased our dividend. I would also like to remind our shareholders that we had spillover income of approximately $1.64 per share at year-end that we'll continue to reinvest. Management is diligently evaluating our liquidity position in this market and regularly discusses the various uses of our capital with our Board, including the possibility of special dividends in 2023. However, our Board has not made any affirmative decisions on the special dividend at this time. In closing, Trinity is operating through volatile times with a measured approach and capitalizing on certain opportunities as they emerge. Our portfolio is built for times like these, and our investment criteria and underwriting process remain as rigorous as ever. Trinity's platform and capabilities are growing, and we are committed to our vision of building the world's best lending platform for growth stage companies. I will now hand the call over to Kyle to provide more detail on our portfolio composition and investment performance. Kyle?