Thank you, Scot. Our first section today is about market and product performance. BolaWrap deployments are increasing across diverse law enforcement agencies, ranging from small departments to large influential agencies in key geographies as well as specialized units such as school resource officers and crisis intervention teams. The net effect is a growing record of documented trust effective integration and consistent field success. Agencies across Colorado, North Carolina and Canada, as examples, have reported strong usage of BolaWrap relative to their own inventory while several of the largest law enforcement agencies in Florida are actively evaluating it as a strategic replacement for traditional electronic control devices like TASERs. Another major Floridian agency, their crisis intervention team reports more frequent BolaWrap use than TASERs, reinforcing the devices growing reputation as a safer and more appropriate tool during mental health or mostly disturbed person calls. Now notably, to date, there have been no reported serious injuries and 0 lawsuits related to BolaWrap deployments. That's a record uncommon and most traditional use of force tools. Historically, use of force data has been difficult to gather with many federal data sets being complete or unreliable. Agencies are often reluctant to share their data unless there's a deep level of trust or establish agency-to-agency relationship. However, through our own conversations with long-standing customers, we believe that many departments are quietly moving away from higher levels of force such as TASERs due to declining usage, high costs and safety concerns. The increasingly restrictive policies are promoting agencies to rethink their approach with a new focus on minimizing risk while maintaining control without better tools, officers often find themselves relying on hands-on methods, which increases the risk of injury for everyone involved. These discussions reinforce what we have long believed there is still no other effective tool to bridge the tactical gap between verbal commands and physical control. Officer injuries and lawsuits are continuing to rise and it underscores an urgent and largely unacknowledged need in modern policing. We believe our analysis reveals a clear pattern. In agencies without comprehensive Wrap programs electronic weapon usage is declining while low-level hands-on control tactics are increasing. That's a dangerous scenario. This is leading to more officer injuries and exposing serious gaps in their current toolkits. In contrast, when agencies have a full Wrap program and they have adopted it, they're experiencing a significant rise in BolaWrap deployments based on their operational needs and it's now outperforming electronic weapons and higher-level use of force incidents, delivering lower liability, higher success rates and greater safety. It's a good news story. Now I want to talk about the favorable federal regulatory changes. We know that favorable policies and legal precedents can drive adoption, they can help deployments, and they certainly help sales. In Q2, we began to see the positive impact of some of these policy shifts both domestically and internationally. Notably, in the United States, the unanimous Supreme Court decision on Barnes v. Felix was issued during Q2. This marks a noteworthy development in this regulatory landscape and favorable conditions to Wrap. This case established a nationwide requirement that confirm what we've known all along, officers deserve the best tools, the best tactics and the best training to deliver safer outcomes for themselves and the communities they serve. The totality of circumstances test, now a federal law uniquely positions the BolaWrap to meet the needs of today's officers while addressing the evolving legal landscape of liability. In Q2, public attention and use of force tools intensified with shows like Last Week Tonight dedicating a full segment to the dangerous risks and fatalities associated with tasers. When combined with the unanimous Barnes v. Felix Supreme Court decision and a recent unintended death in Central California, these events have amplified awareness and urgency around safer alternatives. And as a result, we're seeing measurable upticks in inquiries in our strategic discussions with customers and opening up new conversations about BolaWrap and it's a central place on the [ duty belt. ] Now we're moving to our go-to-market strategy and team readiness and response. Within the last quarter, we completely redefined our message and repositioned our brand in the marketplace. This wasn't intended just to be a marketing refresh. This is an intentional and strategic shift that has now recognized the evolved needs of public safety. We identified a strategic need to adapt to the federal regulatory changes that are imminent, the increasingly restrictive policies and higher uses of force and the rise of mental and behavioral health emergencies and launched what we call the era of pre escalation. We're not just responding to the moment, we named it. And in doing so, we've branded and established that Wrap is a leader in pre-escalation. We believe that we define a new operational timeline for officers, carving out and creating space before force is necessary. A moment when tools and better training and better outcomes can occur. This is what Wrap chose to operate in called the pre-escalation period. To support this new era, we introduced key terms that became foundational across our brand training and communications, terms like pre-escalation in the pre-escalation period. We also developed a new doctrine, the Wrap window of opportunity. A critical moment between verbal engagement and hands-on force where officers can act with control, clarity and compassion. But redefining a message means nothing unless our product, pricing and systems are fully aligned. That's why we relaunched the BolaWrap 150 optimized our pricing models and introduced a family of integrated systems designed for departments to train, deploy and support pre-escalation operations at scale. In short, this wasn't just a relaunch, it was intended to be a redefinition of who we are and how we serve. Wrap has evolved beyond being just a product company. We believe we have become the architects of the pre- escalation era.