Thanks, Brad. I'll kick off my comments with a review of our M&A strategy and two recent acquisitions. As investors familiar with Cadre know, we're committed to a patient and disciplined approach to M&A and use our very selective criteria as we evaluate our funnel. Our targets are niche businesses with high cost of substitution, high margins, leading market positions and recurring revenue profiles. We view potential transactions within 3 categories. Those that will expand our suite of core safety products, those that will grow our geographic footprint and those that will enable us to enter new adjacent verticals. Our acquisition of Alpha Safety, which I'll cover on Slides 11 to 14 falls into the third category. We've long signaled our intention to diversify Cadre's platform by targeting leading manufacturers of mission critical safety products in attractive verticals. Acquiring Alpha Safety both accomplished this strategic objective and is consistent with the established M&A criteria we prioritize. With its leading niche market position, high cost of substitution, strong brand recognition and resiliency through market cycles it's an ideal Cadre business. Also I'd like to underscore that Alpha Safety has defensible recurring revenue and highly visible growth prospects. Its partnership with key customers are approaching 40 years with high margin revenues tied to contracts and committed purchase orders. 2023 revenues were $44 million and EBITDA margins exceeded 20%. Alpha Safety's suite of highly engineered technical products and services focused on radiation protection are outlined in Slide 12. These include engineered containers, ventilation and contamination, field services and maintenance, advanced transportation containers, specialty filters and radiometric instrumentation. Their diversified portfolio of products and services expand the nuclear value chain and are best understood by highlighting the three key nuclear missions they serve. First and the largest by revenue is environmental safety. Approximately 50% of Alpha's 2023 revenues relate to this mission and Alpha provides advanced engineered containers, ventilation and containment solutions and analysis services for the cleanup initiatives that relate to decades of U.S. Nuclear material processing and handling. These include Department of Energy mission critical and mandated cleanup efforts spanning numerous sites from decades of nuclear weapons development and government sponsored nuclear energy research. Second is national security missions, which reflect ongoing and expanding national defense initiatives. For Alpha Safety, this involves advanced engineered container solutions and specialty filters as the U.S. ramps its plutonium pit production. Third, related to nuclear energy, this key mission includes the decommissioning and decontaminating of legacy nuclear power plants. Alpha provides an engineered container solutions and ventilation containment systems. Increasing global demand for sustainable energy sources will drive demand for both legacy and new nuclear power. As a reminder, Alpha does not transport themselves or take into custody nuclear material. Turning to Slide 13, you'll see that this acquisition immediately expands Cadre's total addressable market. Combined with Cadre's serviceable addressable market in our core categories, this now represents an opportunity of up to $8 billion. Based on complex and evolving industry needs and macro tailwinds, nuclear safety presents an opportunity for consistent organic growth and upside through additional M&A. Specifically, we're excited about the platform that exists to pursue add-ons that realize synergies, enhance capabilities and expand the customer base. In summary, we're very pleased to acquire Alpha Safety and look forward to executing on our growth plans. As a leading market position across all its key product lines and a large total addressable market with long-term industry tailwinds. Financial profile strong highlighted by highly visible and predictable revenue supported by long-term contracts and recurring purchase orders. Protected products and limited competition drive EBITDA margins greater than 20% for Alpha. Next, let me take a moment to discuss our accretive acquisition of ICOR Technology announced in December. As you'll see on the right side of Slide 15, this was another transaction that checked many of the boxes we look for in an acquisition target. ICOR is a trusted global supplier of EOD robots with a leading market position, strong brand recognition, compelling macro-economic trends, resiliency through cycles, recurring revenues, and high margins. The business in its most recent fiscal year ended during the summer, achieved approximately $19 million of revenues with EBITDA margins in excess of 20%. Headquartered in Ottawa, Ontario, ICOR is strategically located near the national headquarters of the Canadian Department of National Defense and the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and is also in close proximity to Cadre's EOD business Med-Eng, which is also based in Ottawa. The addition of ICOR meaningfully expands our ability to provide mission critical EOD robots to law enforcement agencies and military organizations, which is an area that we are intimately familiar. We expect to be able to take advantage of Cadre's scale and extensive sales channels to further penetrate ICOR’s key markets. Regarding both acquisitions of ICOR and Alpha Safety we're in the initial phases of integration. Our top priorities include working with teams related to finance, accounting, IT, legal, and compliance. We look forward to implementing core Cadre operating tools in the coming months. In terms of our M&A expectations for the remainder of the year, we continue to be pleased with the uptick in activity in M&A markets, and we are working diligently through our funnel to find other businesses that fit well within our criteria. Turning now to a summary of Cadre's financial performance. Slide 17, 18 detail our Q4 results. As you can see on Slide 17, fourth quarter net income of $9.6 million or $0.25 per share increased 45% as compared to last year's Q4. For the full year, revenue adjusted EBITDA, gross margin, and adjusted EBITDA margin were all the highest since inception. As we continue to roll out our operating model and manage the positioning of our portfolio of premium products, we've made significant progress driving margin expansion. Illustrate on Slide 18 is net sales and adjusted EBITDA growth year-over-year, including our 2024 guidance, which I'll discuss in more in a moment. At its midpoint, this outlook implies full year revenue and adjusted EBITDA growth of 16.5% and 23.5% respectively. This follows a year in which we increase revenue about 6% and adjusted EBITDA 13%. On Slide 19, we present our capital structure as of December 31st, while the M&A market was quiet for the last 12 to 18 months, Cadre continued to accumulate cash on the balance sheet, allowing us to close these two transactions in Q1, and still have what we believe to be a responsible pro forma net leverage ratio of around 2x. This includes both acquisitions adjusted EBITDA contributions based on their last 12 months. We provide new 2024 guidance on Slide 20. We expect next sales to be between $553 million and $572 million, our adjusted EBITDA guidance range of between $104 million and $108 million implies adjusted EBITDA margins of 18.8%. This will be a continuation of our strong margin performance and substantially beat our record 2023 adjusted EBITDA margins at 17.8%. Right now, we expect quarterly revenue splits to be similar to 2023 with Q2 and Q3 being our strongest revenue quarters, but please keep in mind this can be impacted by our customers and their demand timing. Outside transaction expenses, we expect SG&A to be fairly level through the year. We do expect a stronger margin in revenue in Q1 compared to Q4 as our mix normalizes, but please note this excludes any impact from inventory step up related to acquisitions, which will create some headwind on margins and net income. Now, I'll turn it back to Brad for concluding comments.