Thanks, Jesse. Good morning. Thanks for joining us. I’d like to start the call by thanking and congratulating our more than 68,000 Brink’s team members around the world for their efforts to deliver a strong start to 2024. Beyond the strong Q1 financial results, we made significant progress on our strategic initiatives in the four key areas of customer loyalty, innovation, operational excellence, and people and talent. This progress includes balancing both the long-term investments as well as delivering on our short-term commitments. Now onto the results. Starting on Slide 3, we delivered organic growth of 12% for the total company. ATM Managed Services and Digital Retail Solutions or AMS and DRS, were up 18% as demand remains strong in these key markets. Cash and Valuables Management or CVM, was up 11% with strong pricing discipline and stabilization in our Commodities Movement and Storage business. Adjusted EBITDA grew 15% to $218 million and margins expanded 160 basis points to 17.7%, the highest first quarter margins we’ve seen since we started reporting this metric more than a decade ago. Profit growth coupled with share count reductions of about 4% led to a 20% increase in EPS to $1.52 per share. Trailing 12-month free cash flow improved 61% to $363 million with conversion from adjusted EBITDA of 41%. We continue to make meaningful progress on the key tenets of our strategy. DRS and AMS demand is strong and building with another quarter of double-digit organic revenue growth and continued expansion of our worldwide pipeline of opportunities. Operationally, we made good progress on our yearend backlog by accelerating installations of DRS devices in Q1 as we focus on shortening the cycle time from contract signature to revenue. This is an example of the Brink’s business system at work, improving business processes outside of our traditional OpEx activities. In Q4, our Global Product Management team led a focused Kaizen event to improve efficiency in the contract to revenue value stream. Leveraging structured problem-solving tools from the BBS system and various lean methodologies, we were able to reduce our time to revenue by more than 30% across North America, Brazil and Colombia. The resulting actions are now able to be transferred as a best practice to countries around the world. We also remain disciplined in our capital allocation approach. In Q1, we purchased approximately 275,000 shares utilizing $23 million. We have continued the systematic share repurchase program into early Q2. With improving operational performance and a healthy outlook for the future, last week, we announced a 10% increase in our dividend, the second consecutive year of a double-digit increase. Supported by our strong first quarter, we affirm our full year guidance and remain well on track to deliver low-to-mid teens organic revenue growth. Adjusted EBITDA margin expansion of approximately 80 basis points, earnings per share of between $7.30 and $8.00 and free cash flow between $415 million and $465 million. Now let’s turn to Slide 4 and starting on the left, the revenue growth I mentioned earlier was partially offset by an 8% impact from foreign exchange, primarily due to the year-over-year devaluation of the Argentine peso. I will go into more detail on revenue and adjusted EBITDA by segment on the next slide. Adjusted EBITDA margins continue to expand as lean productivity initiatives from the Brink’s business system streamline the way we perform work and we shift the revenue base to higher margin services. Profit growth and a share count reduction of more than 2 million shares drove EPS growth of record of $0.25 to a first quarter record of $1.52 per share. Trailing 12-month free cash flow was up $137 million, or 61% to $363 million, with 41% conversion from EBITDA. Moving to Slide 5, you can see the segment level details. This view reflects adjusted EBITDA to align with our full year 2024 guidance from February. Segment level results for operating profit are included in the appendix for your reference. For the quarter, we saw organic growth in all segments and customer offerings. In North America, organic revenue growth accelerated sequentially to 1% in the quarter. Strong growth in AMS and DRS revenue was highlighted by the installation of the most DRS devices in our history in the quarter as we work through a larger than normal yearend backlog. As we discussed last quarter, we expect accelerating growth in North America as we lap our portfolio rationalization efforts from the prior year, starting this year in Quarter 2 and capitalize on the large and growing pipeline that we have developed in both AMS and DRS. Adjusted EBITDA margins in North America were up 280 basis points in the quarter to a record of 16.9%. Good pricing efforts, portfolio rationalization and cost productivity, especially in direct labor, were the main drivers of the margin expansion. I’m encouraged by the meaningful progress we’ve delivered on margins in North America over the last two years. The 16.9% this quarter is up 570 basis points from 11.2% in Q1 of 2022. This represents a 66% improvement in total adjusted EBITDA in just two short years. As I look forward, I remain encouraged by the potential of key transformational initiatives still to come in routing and scheduling, fuel efficiency and labor optimization that will help us continue our positive momentum in North America. In Latin America, organic growth of 37% was driven by pricing efforts to offset inflation, which more than outpaced the impact of foreign exchange. We continue to monitor ongoing geopolitical and economic headwinds in the region, including the impact of currency devaluation on the economy of Argentina and the headwinds we’ve discussed previously in Brazil. The trends in the region have led us to streamline our cost structure in the early part of the year, which is impacting this quarter’s EBITDA margins. As you can see from the total revenue growth of 6%, we are offsetting those impacts through disciplined pricing and a shift to DRS, AMS, which was up more than 25% in the quarter in the segment. Europe delivered 6% organic growth with 60 basis points of margin expansion in Q1 and remains on a strong trajectory. With recent large DRS and AMS wins that are due to begin producing revenue over the balance of the year, we expect continued strong performance in the segment for the rest of the year. And then finally, in our Rest of World segment, we realized organic growth of 4% with 150 basis points in margin expansion. The quarter was highlighted by a stabilizing performance in our Global Services business as commodity shipping and storage picked up in all areas outside of North America. Turning to Slide 6, I will provide an update on our results by customer offering. Starting with CVM, Q1 organic growth of 11% accelerated sequentially from 7% in the prior quarter, driven by disciplined pricing efforts and a stabilization in our Global Services business. While total Global Services revenue growth was broadly in line with the total company results, this was a headwind for North America as commodities moved out of the segment into other regions. As you can see by our strong margin improvement, we continue to build on our lean and transformation initiatives across all markets. These initiatives and growth in AMS/DRS revenue have driven a reduction in miles driven and fueled usage that led to higher levels of productivity. Broadly, we saw continued improvements across all metrics related to safety, quality, cost, productivity and service delivery, highlighted by another quarter of reduced safety-related incidents with our employees. DRS was highlighted by another quarter of sequential improvement in North America. In Q1, we delivered record installations in the first quarter and reduced our backlog to a more normalized level. The value proposition of less frequent business interruptions and working capital optimization is clearly resonating with our customers. In the quarter, we completed several new agreements in the discount and convenience store verticals and are continuing conversations with customers across a robust worldwide pipeline of opportunities that increased again this quarter. We have significant room for growth in DRS as we continue to penetrate a large whitespace of unvented customers, convert existing retail customers from traditional CIT services, and expand our footprint and share of wallet with existing DRS customers, the purest form of customer satisfaction. AMS delivered sequential acceleration over Q4, highlighted by the closing of a few key deals to bring new ATMs into our managed network in high-traffic retail locations. We continue to evolve our go-to-market approach in AMS as we engage with our banking partners on our value proposition and technical capabilities across all geographies. Additional recent contract wins in Europe and Latin America, as well as a robust and a maturing pipeline of opportunities, support our expected growth for the rest of the year. In total, AMS and DRS represent 21% of our trailing 12-month revenue and grew 18% organically in Q1. We expect at least double-digit growth in these offerings over the year and are targeting an increase as a percentage of total revenue of 1 to 2 points by the end of the year. I believe we’re still in the early stages of our transition to these higher-margin recurring revenue offerings, and I’m excited about the opportunities that remain in front of us. Overall, revenue growth is in line with our expectations for the quarter and we delivered record EBITDA margins as we continue to make strides transforming our business. The shift to new revenue streams on top of productivity actions across the globe is improving our operating consistency and predictability. With our AMS and DRS offerings delivering reduced operating costs for our customers, we remain well positioned to deliver on our commitments for the year and continue to create value for our shareholders. With that, I’d like to turn it over to Kurt to talk through the additional details on the quarter and over our full year guidance. I’ll return with some closing comments and thoughts before Q&A. Kurt?