Thank you Jackie. Thank you for joining us for this call. Let me start by just quickly going through the numbers. This is a good quarter. Net income came in at $61.5 million or $0.81 a share. I think last quarter, we were $0.72. And the quarter this time last year, we were at $0.63. I had checked last week what the consensus estimates were. I think it was $0.74. So always happy when we do a little better than consensus. What contributed to this? First and foremost is margin. We had guided to the fact that margin would be up, and it was up. Margin came in at 2.78%. I think last quarter, we were at 2.72%. So nice growth in margin. Actually, if I look from third quarter of last year to this, it is been a 9% increase in our margin. So we are happy about that. This was officially the quarter in which the inflection -- the monetary policy inflection happened, happened pretty late in the quarter, but we started acting on bringing down cost of funds even slightly before that. The cost of deposits this quarter declined to 3.06% from 3.09% last quarter. Cost of interest-bearing deposits came down from 4.26% to 4.20%. Now remember the Fed move happened pretty late in the quarter. So if you want to see the better impact of all of that, you should look at our spot rate. And the portfolio APY on deposits on September 30 was 2.93%. On June 30, it was 3.09%. And if you look at just spot APY for interest-bearing, it came down from 4.29% in June to 4.01%. Even this doesn't actually fully include the actions that we are taking on deposits because some of our deposit products get only priced monthly. So the stuff that happened on October 1 is outside of that. So we are being long-winded, we are saying we are being proactive on staying ahead of changes in the interest rate environment. Loan-to-deposit ratio has now come down to 87.6%, which is fairly low compared to -- I don't know, Leslie if you look back on what was our low point, but feeling very good about where loan-to-deposit ratio is from a liquidity perspective. NIDDA, as we had said to you last quarter, the last couple of quarters, we have had very, very strong growth, some seasonal trends in that -- the trends go the other way for us in the second half. Average deposits NIDDA were down $93 million -- sorry, sorry, $64 million. Total deposits are up [$93 million] (ph). Period NIDDA was down $430 million. It's really made up of a number of things. One is some seasonality, especially in our title book, but also in our corporate book. Some of it is actually some deposit actions we took. We're trying to push out some very high-priced price-sensitive deposits, which we were doing in the second quarter, but it really -- while we took those actions in the second quarter, the money didn't leave until the third quarter. So it is a little bit of that. And I'm surprised to even be saying that still some move from DDA to money market this late in the game, but we saw some of that also happen. So all of that contributed to this. But what's important is really average NIDDA. There can be a lot of noise in our period-end numbers. Average DDA was down $64 million. And despite that, our margins still went up 6 basis points. So we are very happy about that. Into the fourth quarter, the seasonal headwinds will remain. We are expecting NIDDA -- our best guess is that it will be flat. But we very much expect that to start growing again when the seasonal trends favor us in the first quarter and second quarter. So the pipeline of new business that is coming in is still very robust. We are very happy with the business that we've closed this quarter and looking to close into the fourth quarter. So loans were down $230 million this quarter, mostly in the residential and in the franchise and leasing business as we've been driving those down for quite some time. Tom will get into the details of that in a little bit. In terms of credit charge-offs, we are again, very, very low. Single digits, I think it was $6.5 million, Leslie, correct? $6.5 million for the quarter. We did build reserve again this quarter from 92 -- I guess, not reserved, it is ACL -- is up to 94 basis points. NPA did tick up a little bit. NPAs were 54 basis points, excluding the guaranteed portion of SBA loans that are at 39 -- there were 39 basis points in June, excluding the SBA guarantee portion. The two notable loans that moved into NPLs this quarter were in the C&I book, this is episodic. It does happen from time-to-time. We are adequately reserved for both these loans. They happen to be in two very different industries. It's just very unique to the situation that these borrowers are in. One is in the media space, the other is in the logistics space. But there is no trends anywhere in the portfolio that would suggest that this is something of that would repeat itself. Capital TCE/TA went up to 7.6%. Tangible book value continued to accrete up to $36.52. So pretty much good news on that front. We did have -- as you will remember, earlier in the year, we hired Ernie Diaz, who now runs our small business, commercial and retail franchise. We made another significant hire this quarter, pretty late in the quarter in September. Beth Hosen joined us. She's had a storied career at JPMorgan for three decades plus and a little bit of time at Wells Fargo as well. So she joined the team. We are very happy to have her here. I'm sure she'll make a big impact over the coming three, four, five years. Quickly looking to – yes the hurricane, right? The quarter, we unfortunately give you hurricane updates as well. We had two hurricanes blow through, one in September, one in October. The one in September missed us for the most part, no damage to either our physical premises or the loan portfolio. Milton which came by just last week, was closer to our footprint on the West Coast. But I'm happy to report that really did not do much damage. All our branches are back in business. All locations are reopened. We are coming through the loan portfolio to make sure that there is no impact. So far, we have not found anything, but the work is not complete. So over the course of next few days, we will comb through the entire portfolio, and if there is anything, we'll give you an update. But as of right now, nothing to report back. This weekend, I was -- I got an e-mail from our regulators asking for a bunch of detailed questions, as they often do. And one question kind of stuck out. And it was about fourth quarter of last year. It was about a small charge in our P&L and they asked me, could you walk us through what that was? And I just didn't remember what it was. So I call Leslie on Sunday. I said do you remember this? And she jogged her memory and she didn't remember it either. So I took it apart myself. I started pulling my files out to just go back and remind myself of where we were fourth quarter, if I could find something to answer. Long story short, I still don't know what the answer to that $1 million charge is, and Leslie is going to take it from here. But it gave me an opportunity to -- I started reading a press release from four quarters ago. And as you can imagine, preparing for earnings for this call, we are deep in the numbers for what happened in the last three months. But this kind of broke that rhythm a little bit and force me to look at where we were a year ago. And then I started looking -- taking a bigger picture. The more I looked at this, the better I felt. And I wrote down some just a few numbers over the last few quarters for myself, and I want to share that on this call. And Leslie, you can correct me if I'm wrong anywhere. The key indicators of success really are EPS, margin, ROA, ROE. And of course, we have to keep an eye on credit and so on, right? So after March Madness, we embarked on the strategy of improving profitability through balance sheet transformation. I mean there's one sentence that describes what we've been trying to do over the last six quarters, it's basically this. So if I just go back and look at the last four quarters, our EPS has gone starting in fourth quarter of last year, $0.62 then $0.69 then $0.72 and now $0.81. It is not on the back of buybacks or anything like that. This is just core performance. Our NIM has gone, again starting from fourth quarter of last year, 2.60% to 2.57% to 2.72% to 2.78%. Our ROA was [0.52% fourth quarter of last year, then 0.59% and 0.61% then 0.69%] (ph). We're still not there. This is not a mission accomplished kind of thing. This is -- but it's a trajectory that I -- that made me feel good, and I just wanted to share. ROE similarly, it was 7.3%, went to 7.9%, went to 8%, now it's 8.8%. Again, we are not there yet, but we're moving in the right direction. And just to make a point, this is not off of the back of cost cutting. This is not off of the back of leading reserves. If anything, our ACL went from [0.82% to 0.90% to 0.92% to 0.94%] (ph). We're building ACL. Charge-offs are low, almost too low for a commercial bank. And bit by bit, EPS is going up, margin is going up, ROA is going up, ROE is going up. So just -- I wanted to share that because it happened on Sunday when I was for a very different reason, forced to go back and look at fourth quarter of last year, which I was not paying attention to, and I thought I'd share that with you. The other thing I would say is, we give you guidance every January. That's our best guess of where the year will be. Sometimes we are accurate. Sometimes we're not. Last year, for example, we saw March Madness coming. So whatever guidance we gave you in January got shredded in March, thanks to Silicon Valley and a couple of other banks. But this year, the guidance we gave you is coming in just -- our results are coming in just in line with the guidance we gave you. We told you that we'll have double-digit NIDDA growth. Well as of right now, we're at about 11.7%. We told you that non-broker deposits will grow high single digits. I think we're at just over 8% right now. We said margin would grow and would get into the high 2s, well, we're at 2.78% right now. Loans, we said will be high single digits. I think we are a little behind over there, but we have another quarter to go, we'll probably end up in the mid-single digits. So it is kind of the opposite of last year, where everything was going haywire. This year, everything is falling into plan and everything has steadily increased. By the way, I also want to make a point. These improvements are not done artificially. This is not by some big restructure in the balance sheet and magically, your numbers look better than next quarter. We didn't do any of that. We just took a sustained long-term approach to this, improve the balance sheet, left side improve the balance sheet right side, keep our expenses in check. Let's keep credit and check and the profitability will take care of itself, not immediately, but over time. And I'm very happy to see where everything is coming out. And -- but I just wanted to share that. We often get lost in just one quarter, but it's important to kind of pull back and look at two, three, four quarters. So -- but with that ran, I will turn it over to Mr. Cornish.