Thank you, John, and good morning, everyone. We appreciate joining us to review our first quarter 2025 results. It was another active quarter for TeraWulf, as we continued to build on the strong momentum from 2024 across both our Bitcoin Mining and High Performance Compute or HPC businesses. We remain committed to executing our strategy, maximizing the value of our megawatts through scalable sustainable infrastructure. Before turning to the business highlights, I want to take a moment to thank you, our shareholders, especially those of you who have supported us since the very beginning. We are positioning TeraWulf to lead at the intersection of energy and compute. It's a long-term effort, but one that we believe will create substantial value over time. Starting with WULF Mining, our sustainable Bitcoin Mining platform at our Lake Mariner facility in Upstate New York. During the quarter, we successfully energized Miner Building 5, bringing total operational capacity to 245 megawatts. We exited the quarter with a self-mining hash rate of 12.2 exahash and fleet efficiency of 18 joules per terahash. As we mentioned on our February call, extreme weather in January and February temporarily impacted power pricing. However, by March and well into April, pricing normalized, and our mining operations returned to positive EBITDA in the month of April. I also want to confirm that we received and installed all of our S21 Pro miners before any potential tariff implications, ensuring uninterrupted deployment. Turning to WULF Compute, our High Power Compute hosting platform. Our mission here is to scale our purpose-built liquid-cooled infrastructure to meet the growing demand for AI and compute intensive workloads. Demand remains strong, especially from enterprises seeking secure high density infrastructure over the next 12 months to 18 months. We are focused on working with prospective partners that have capital to deploy, secured GPU allocations and credit profiles that support project level financing. Today, we are actively executing on three dedicated buildings for our HPC anchor tenant, Core42, the WULF Den, CB-1 and CB-2. These facilities are our top construction and operational priority, following five months of close collaboration with our partner and their integrator and many consultants. The WULF Den is operational and will begin generating revenues in Q2 and we expect CB-1 to go live in Q3 and CB-2 in Q4. Executing on these initial facilities will drive further demand for our site and further interest in partnering with the TeraWulf team for highly complex HPC deployment. Our partnership with Core42 is progressing exceptionally well. We collaborate daily to align on technical specifications and deployment timelines to give a sense of the scale and sophistication involved. Dell, Core42's integrator expects to have over 180 personnel on site during the GPU tuning phase. We are optimizing design elements every day to ensure our infrastructure meets both current and future demand. These refinements may accelerate or delay timing and could affect overall infrastructure costs. Our goal is to design infrastructure that will support future generations of GPUs, so we are committed to getting it right the first time. A successful launch will not only position us for further potential expansion with Core42, but also establish TeraWulf as a leader in next generation data center development. Success here will also accelerate our broader HPC hosting strategy. Additional prospective tenants are closely watching our progress and we are actively engaged in discussions to secure new commitments as we buildout our capacity. Let me touch on a few additional updates. First, capacity. In April, we received approval from NYISO for an additional 250 megawatts of capacity at Lake Mariner, bringing the current total to 500 megawatts. We intend to request an additional 250 megawatts that will bring our total power at Lake Mariner to 750 megawatts. We appreciate the support and collaboration of NYISO as we scale this site. Second, tariffs. We're monitoring the evolving tariff landscape. Based on current information, we estimate a 5% to 10% impact to build costs. We remain committed to underwriting projects to mid-teens unlevered returns and will adapt as needed to protect project economics. Third, project financing. We remain on track for mid-year execution of the project financing of our 72.5 megawatt Core42 buildout. We are scheduled to officially launch the process next week with our advisors at JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley and early feedback from potential lenders has been positive. Finally, our growth pipeline. Beyond our 750 megawatts roadmap at Lake Mariner, we continue to pursue expansion opportunities. At the top of the list is the Cayuga Site, a sister facility to Lake Mariner located on Lake Cayuga in Upstate New York. It shares the same strategic advantages in land, power, and fiber access. That process is progressing with our Board and we'll share more when we have firm updates. We're also evaluating additional sites with strong time-to-power potential and opportunities for on-site generation. This is an area where our energy infrastructure expertise truly differentiates us. Lastly, I want to address the Company Services agreement with Beowulf Electricity & Data, a private company owned by me that currently provides electricity and digital infrastructure services to TeraWulf. We believe the time is right to simplify the structure. We are currently pursuing a full integration of Beowulf and TeraWulf to eliminate related party disclosures, streamline operations, and better align incentives across the organization. The process is driven by our Board and guided by rigorous governance protocols and independent oversight to ensure transparency and shareholder alignment. To summarize, our key near-term priorities are. One, optimize our self-mining platform following the energization of MB-5. Two, deliver all three Core42 buildings on time and on budget. Three, lease additional HPC hosting capacity at Lake Mariner and Four, closed project financing for the Core42 buildout. With that I will turn it over to our Chief Financial Officer, Patrick Fleury.