Thanks, Mike. Good morning, and thanks, everyone, for joining us for CoreCivic's third quarter 2024 earnings call. On this morning's call, I will provide details of our third quarter financial performance. I will also discuss our latest operational results and update you on the latest developments and opportunities with our government partners. Following my remarks, I will turn the call over to our CFO, Dave Garfinkle, who will provide greater detail on our financial results and on our updated 2024 financial guidance. Dave will also provide an update on our capital structure initiatives, including progress on our leverage target. Finally, just before our Q&A, I will offer some brief comments on the potential impact of the election on our business. First, I'll start with a high-level overview of our third quarter financial results. In the third quarter, we generated revenue of $491.6 million, a 2% increase compared with the prior year quarter. Underlying revenue growth, excluding the South Texas family residential center, which closed during the quarter, would have increased over 5% against the prior year. I will provide more color on our performance with our federal, state and local partner groups later in the call. During the third quarter of 2024, we generated normalized funds from operations or FFO of $47.6 million, or $0.43 per share compared to $40.5 million or $0.35 per share in the third quarter of 2023, representing a 23% per share increase. The increase in FFO is driven by higher revenues combined with expense normalization and lower interest expense resulting from our debt reduction. These increases were partially offset by higher G&A expenses and decreased lease revenue in our Property segment resulting from our previously disclosed expiration of a lease with the State of California at our California City Correctional Center effective March 31, 2024. Federal partners, primarily immigrations and customs enforcement or ICE, and the United States Marshals Service comprised slightly over half of CoreCivic's total revenue. During the third quarter of 2024, revenue from our Federal partners was essentially flat compared with the third quarter of last year. Revenue from ICE, our largest partner, declined 3.4% when comparing the third quarter of 2024 versus the prior year period. However, excluding the South Texas Family Residential Center, our revenue with ICE increased 10.9% versus the third quarter of 2023, a rate which is indicative of ICE, continued detention capacity needs and we believe satisfaction with our service delivery. Excluding South Texas, overall Federal revenue for CoreCivic in the third quarter of 2024 increased 7% year-over-year. Now, I'd like to discuss ICE's usage of detention capacity broadly. Following passage of the bipartisan funding bill in March of this year, which provided funding for 41,500 detention beds, ICE's actual usage of detention beds dipped from 39,000 at the start of March to roughly 34,000 to 35,000 in April before increasing to roughly 37,000 to 38,000 to the end of the second quarter. ICE's overall detention population count remained relatively flat during the third quarter, and the most recently published ICE detention total was 37,395 on September 17, 2024. ICE has not updated this total count since the October 1 start of the new federal fiscal year, so it is not known if or how their usage may have changed since the new fiscal year commenced. However, ICE populations in our facilities increased 5% in October. CoreCivic's revenue from state partners in our Safety and Community segments in the third quarter grew 3% versus the prior year. This increase is a result of higher per diem rates and steady occupancy from our state government partners, as well as contributions from the new state contracts with Wyoming and Montana signed in the fourth quarter of 2023 and the third quarter of 2024, which contributed to 1.6% of that growth. Also worth noting, in October of 2023, the Allen Gamble Correctional Center in Holdenville, Oklahoma, transitioned from a management contract with the state of Oklahoma to a lease, which means we now include it in our Property segment. Excluding the Allen Gamble facility, state revenue in our Safety and Community segments increased by nearly 8% year-over-year. Within our safety portfolio, some of our greatest operational improvements have come in facility-serving state partners. For example, we continue to make progress on our financial and operating metrics at our La Palma Correctional Center in Eloy, Arizona, since we pivoted from a federal contract to a contract with the state of Arizona roughly two years ago. La Palma's year-over-year EBITDA improvement in the third quarter was nearly $4 million as our investments and hard work directed at local hiring have cut the facility's reliance on temporary labor resources and incentives. To round out our discussion, the third quarter of 2024 revenue, local revenue in our Safety and Community segments, which is revenue generated from contracts with county governments, increased 39%. This growth reflects new management contracts signed in the second half of 2023 with Hinds County, Mississippi and Harris County, Texas. Both populations are housed at our Tallahatchie County Correctional Facility located in Tutwiler, Mississippi. CoreCivic's overall occupancy in our Safety and Community segments for the third quarter of 2024 increased to 75.2% from 72% in the prior year period. This growth in occupancy stems from both higher use of existing contracts, particularly with ICE, and also from the four new contracts signed in the second half of 2023, as well as the new contract signed in the third quarter of 2024 that I have mentioned. From the third quarter of 2023 to the third quarter of this year, occupancy in our Safety segment increased from 72.6% to 75.7%, while occupancy in our Community segment improved from 62.8% to 66.7%. As we have mentioned in the past, our operating model has significant embedded operating leverage to changes in occupancy, and this was a factor in our margin improvement during the third quarter. Through the first three quarters of 2024, our ongoing labor attraction and retention efforts continue to generate operational and financial improvement. This follows a particularly challenged period for staffing during the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2022 and in 2023, labor market pressures necessitated temporary incentives and related incremental operating expenses, including travel and expense outlays. The CoreCivic team responded by increasing frontline employee compensation as well as by designing and implementing unique human capital attraction and retention strategies. Today, I am proud to report that our staffing has improved to nearly pre-pandemic levels, and that has allowed us to dial back elevated spending on temporary incentives and associated travel expenses. Importantly, our improved staffing has also positioned us well, operationally to manage our customers' higher population needs and respond swiftly to opportunities, including those I will discuss shortly. As we survey labor markets across the enterprise today, the labor markets we see in most of our markets are displaying normalization and greater workforce disability. Labor inflation has now returned to relatively normal levels. CoreCivic's Safety segment is easily our largest segment, having provided 93% of total revenue year-to-date. And net operating income for our Safety statement increased 25% during the third quarter of 2024 over the third quarter of 2023, reflecting the cost management efforts and occupancy trends I just detailed. I'll now turn to our Community segment, which currently comprises of 21 residential reentry facilities serving the Federal Bureau of Prisons as well as various state and county governments. The Community segment is engaged primarily in preparing individuals for successful reentry to their communities after a period of incarceration or as an alternative to incarceration. Residential reentry facilities are typically smaller than the prison and detention facilities that comprise our Safety segment. Additionally, most residential reentry facilities are located in urban environments, closer to employment opportunities, as well as to family. In addition to our 21 residential reentry facilities, our non-residential services, the electronic monitoring and case management services are also included in our Community segment. As mentioned, occupancy in the Community segment improved in the third quarter of 2024 compared with the third quarter of 2023. However, net operating income in the segment declined $2.9 million, partly due to the settlement of a legal matter at one of our facilities. Similar to our Safety segment, our Community segment facilities have been able to reduce temporary staffing incentives. We remain positive about the occupancy outlook for the Community segment now that the pandemic-related public health policies have ended, and as more of our government partners return their focus to successful reentry in order to curb the recidivism challenge. Dave will provide further color relating to our strong financial performance and execution on our long-term capital allocation strategy. But one item I'd like to highlight is continued progress on our leverage. In August of 2020, we established a leverage target of 2.25x to 2.75x, calculated as net debt to trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA. I'm exceptionally proud that CoreCivic has delivered on this target, and we ended the quarter with leverage at 2.2x trailing 12-month adjusted EBITDA for this quarter, slightly below our long-term target after initially reaching our target last quarter. While we expect leverage to increase over the next few quarters, we will continue to maintain a strong balance sheet providing us with flexibility to execute our long-term business strategy while creating shareholder value, thoughtfully returning capital to shareholders. While we did not repurchase any shares this quarter, our diluted shares outstanding remain 3% below the year-ago quarter based on 4.9 million shares we purchased over the last 12 months at a total cost of $72 million. To conclude this business review, we believe the long-term macro environment for our federal, state, and local business remains positive. Our current and prospective government partners face complex challenges, including existing prison capacity limitations, aging and expenses to maintain facilities, persistent staffing challenges, and populations that are increasing in numbers and involving in their complexity. Ongoing direct conversations with our partners highlight their growing needs, as do other available metrics, including jail backlogs and prison population forecasts. While uncertainties during an election year may have slowed some procurements, the underlying need for more beds is there, and CoreCivic is ready to help solve problems for federal, state, and local government agencies to help address their various challenges in the near to long-term. Some of these opportunities may require activations of several idle facilities, and CoreCivic has taken proactive steps to ready facilities for activation. Many of the public opportunities are on the federal side, particularly with ICE, our largest partner. On May 30, ICE issued a broad RFI seeking information on detention capacity within three areas of responsibility, or AOR, Chicago, Harlingen, Texas, and Salt Lake City. Generally, the responding facility should be within a two-hour commute from the listed ICE field office or subfield office, comply with ICE performance-based national detention standards, have approximately 850 to 950 detention beds plus an infirmary. ICE has expressed a preference for a dedicated facility, but will consider a shared facility. Respondents may propose one or more facilities in each AOR and may also support multiple AORs. The RFI is for informational-purposes only and does not constitute an RFP or a commitment to issue an RFP. In June, CoreCivic responded with multiple facility options, including our idled 1,033-bed Midwest Regional Reception Center in Kansas. We believe we are the only provider with available capacity in all three locations. We anticipate an RFP for these opportunities in early 2025. In June of 2024, ICE also issued an RFP for up to 600 detention beds in the State of New Jersey, which would expand the capacity in the state. Responses are due next week, November 15th and we are participating in the process. Rounding out our discussion of federal opportunities, ICE issued an additional RFI in August of this year titled ICE West Coast Multi-State RFI to identify possible detention facilities available for single adults in areas covered by the San Francisco, Seattle, Phoenix and El Paso, ICE field offices. The RFI seeks approximately 850 to 950 detention beds for each of the four field offices. Facilities must be able to meet PBNDS standards and include an affirmly. Dedicated facilities are preferred, but facilities with the ability to separate different populations would also be considered. We responded to this RFI during September. In sum, this is the greatest level of procurement activity we have seen with eyes in over a decade, demonstrating the continued need for additional detention solutions in various locations throughout the United States. Many of our state partners also have growing need for capacity. During the third quarter, we were awarded a new major contract from the State of Montana and in early August, we received from them approximately 120 additional residents at our 1,896 beds World Correctional Facility in Eloy, Arizona where we are already managing 120 residents for the state of Montana. With these added residents, the Saguaro facility, which also houses populations for Hawaii and Idaho, is near full capacity. Last week, the State of Montana issued another RFP for an additional 120 beds and up to 360 beds within the continental United States, and CoreCivic intends to respond to Montana's request this month. CoreCivic enjoys a strong relationship with the state of Montana, which includes both in-state populations at the company-owned and fully-occupied Crossroads Correctional Center in Shelby, Montana, as well as out-of-state populations at our Saguaro facilities. In addition to Montana, as I previously mentioned, we remain in discussions with several other existing state partners, as well as new state partners that could result in the activation of one or more idle facilities. These opportunities could manifest as early as 2025. In conclusion, CoreCivic continues to demonstrate operating cost discipline combined with revenue growth from our diverse government partners. The future demand outlook for our essential services remains positive as evidenced by the RFIs and RFPs that I had just discussed. Our financial results during the third quarter and year-to-date 2024 reflect the ongoing hard work and prudent decisions made by our focus team here at CoreCivic, as well as the inherent value of our government solutions. Our readily available bed capacity and key locations positions us well to serve the growing needs of our government partners. As Dave will explain in further detail, we are updating our financial guidance for 2024 based on our strong financial performance again in the third quarter. Now I will turn the call over to Dave, who will provide a detailed look at our third quarter financial results, our capital market activities, and assumptions included in our newly updated financial guides. Over to you, Dave.