Thank you, Mollie. Welcome, everyone, and thank you all for joining us today. As I hope you've seen this morning, this morning, we reported once again, record results, with EPS and adjusted EPS of $2.60 per share, which is up over 40% over a year ago. As always, there are onetime factors that influence these numbers, and this quarter, they overall did happen to cut positively. So as we always say, during good quarters and in not-so-good quarters, one should never take one of our quarters and multiply it by 4. But even normalizing for the onetime factors, this was a record quarter, a quarter I would call spectacular and a set of results that to me was particularly gratifying given that we delivered these results in the face of major headwinds in two of our businesses and while continuing to invest in all of our businesses. So there are different ways that one can tell the story of this quarter. One is to go business by business to talk about the terrific performances we had in Corp Fin and FLC and Strat Com and how those performances more than overcame these areas of shortfall, and Paul will review the business in that way. With your permission, I'd like to see if I can put a higher-level lens on the quarter, a bit of a more holistic, integrated lens and try to tie the results of this quarter, some of the topics that we have talked about over the years, some of the underlying philosophies, the set of strategies that our teams have been driving not only business by business but as a whole, and not only quarter-by-quarter but now for close to a decade. Over the years, you've heard us talk a lot about organic growth, about focusing on high-valued areas where we believe we have a right to win. The problem with those words is that they could just be slogans. What we have tried to do in this company is to turn them into much more than slogans. What we've tried to do is to turn them into core philosophies, into approaches and approaches that have teeth, teeth that require actions in times that are sometimes comfortable but also operate in times when adhering to those values might not be so comfortable. For example, when adhering to those values might hurt the earnings for a particular business in a particular quarter. This goal of ours for organic growth reflects several core beliefs that we are committed to, that are tied to what we believe is necessary to deliver for all three of the critical stakeholders, the stakeholders that matter in our business. One is making a fundamental difference for our clients. The second is building a place where great people want to be at where great people can build great fulfilling careers. And doing both of those while, at the same time, delivering real value for you, our shareholders. There are a number of tenets underlying them. Let me summarize the key one. The first one is the easy one. It's the most obvious one. We are a client service business, which means at our core, we have to target being the best at helping our clients. That's a general statement for professional services. In our case, it means helping clients in key matters in high-stake situations. Aspiring to be the best in times of crisis or urgency requires us to make sure we have the right leading expertise. And it's important to define leading expertise right. It's not only defined as people who intellectually know what could be done or intellectually know what needs to be done, but people who have been on the front line of major crises and opportunities have actually been able to help clients deliver in those situations. The third point is maybe less obvious, but it's a consequence of those first two points, which is the core determinant of our growth and our experience is rarely whether there's a market out there. It almost always is. The challenge almost always is much more around eliminating supply side constraints which, in turn, means continually committing, continually in good quarters and bad quarters, committing to enhancing our team, supporting the growth and promotion of core committed professionals and making ourselves over time increasingly the most attractive place for terrific folks outside the firm. And of course, it requires not only getting the folks in or promoting the folks, but making sure when you do that, they feel supported, investing behind them as they have conviction about where they can double down on our core business or where they see they can find new adjacencies they can believe they can win in or where they find geographies they think they can seize. These principles, as we've discussed, are far from rocket science and they are easy to mouth. They're also easy to commit to when businesses are soaring. The rubber hits the road is what you do when the businesses are not soaring, when a business is down in a quarter or struggling. Let me take those principles and see if I can give some insight into what I think drove the quarter, first, for the businesses that soared this quarter and then for the two businesses that had some challenges. When you look at the results this quarter for Corp Fin, FLC or Strat Com, you can talk about the great things that happened in the quarter, the jobs won, the market conditions that helped and, of course, there are those. What that sort of short-term lens misses is just how much the current quarter reflects the activities and, I believe, the courage that was shown by key leaders in those segments and subsegments, not only this quarter or this year but last year and 2, 3 and 4 years ago, in quarters where certain businesses weren't soaring, but where the leaders and the individuals involved had conviction about the propositions we are driving and had confidence in the teams leading those efforts. Let me see if I can illustrate that first with Corp Fin. Corp Fin had another record quarter with multiple sub-businesses delivering double-digit growth year-over-year, and those results obviously reflect some things that happened this year. But importantly, at its core, my belief is that Corp Fin's powerful results, first, primarily reflect major convictions and did decisions made in quarters past, bold bets that the leaders bet behind in businesses that weren't performing at that time or on adjacent businesses that, at that point in time, we're unproven. There are so many examples of that in Corp Fin I can't possibly do them all justice, but let me touch on a few. In the U.K., we've always had a great Creditor Rights business, and we always support that business. But the team there also had a set of people there who believed they could add an adjacent business, a leader insolvency business. And they bet on that team, a set of bets that has turned out to be a great growth engine for us this quarter and, we believe, going forward. In Germany, it was around committing to and supporting and building on a terrific team in Andersch, which as you may remember, shortly after they came, faced significant headwinds when the German government launched the moratorium on bankruptcy during COVID. That confidence is being rewarded right now, yes, in terms of the terrific restructuring results in the quarter, but also with Germany now becoming a platform for a broader set of businesses that we can grow behind. We've talked about Australia a number of times, the transformation that happened there because we had confidence on the quality of the people on the ground and the vision they had, a vision that saw a way to get us from a distant player in restructuring to the #1 or 2 player in restructuring, but also that they saw that was a way to turn FTI as a whole into a destination of choice across segments for great professionals, a vision that I believe is fully underway to being fulfilled. These bets are in adjacencies and businesses that were struggling, the quarter's results also reflect the bets we've made in the last several years to continue to invest in businesses where we've always been strong. The teams have avoided the risk of being complacent or sitting on their laurels. They've doubled down in core businesses like restructuring, adding talent in verticals where we thought we could even be stronger like health care or airlines, all of which has led us to winning some of the biggest jobs in both of those industries over the last few years. There are so many other examples I could go to, but let me just pick one last one for Corp Fin, which is the key bets we've made in transactions, which were bets behind a terrific leadership team, and a belief that the quality of that team would allow us to gain significant market share in a market where we weren't as well-known as we thought we should be. As a result, that business has not only grown significantly over the last 4 or 5 years, it even grew in the first half of this year when transaction volumes generally in the markets were down. A point I think is important. None of those businesses, decisions in those businesses was automatically profitable. In the quarter, they were made. Most of those decisions actually cost us money initially. They were, of course, not decisions made lightly. We have disciplined teams that were made with discipline, with focus on questions like, do we have the right proposition? Do we actually have the right team that will take accountability and be able to deliver on those propositions? But where we had those teams and the right proposition, our leadership had the courage to bet and support those bets, yes, in good quarters, but also in the quarters that were not so good. The results we are showing this quarter reflect those commitments. And in my mind, they celebrate the commitments that these folks made. Let me talk about some analogous moves that the FLC leadership team has made. Some of you will remember that FLC's adjusted EBITDA was essentially flat for a while or rather it was zigzagging around a relatively flat line for a fair number of years. And during those years, we often talked on calls like this about investments we are making, overseas in certain businesses and in the United States. And during many of those years, it was hard to see the effect of those investments on bottom line performance. The reality was that within those investments were some investments that didn't work, and we had to take corrective action. What I think it was harder to see, however, was that within those investments were also powerful investments that were working, that were building on the historical strengths of FLC and helping liberate and make more visible to the market some of the underlying power of what we have always had in FLC, for example, the buildup of a much more prominent and much more well-known financial services practice, which today is not only winning some of the biggest jobs in the market but is now also a key destination for leading people who want to join us, including 15 new SMDs and MDs this year. We're continuing to build on our cybersecurity practice, not only in the U.S., but now also overseas and to broaden it into adjacencies where we believe we have the right to win such as the national security practice. We're building our risk and investigations practice more generally, not only by investing in great promotions and terrific lateral hires to enhance our capabilities, but also by figuring out ever better ways to link our deep R&I experts with our experts in financial services and other regulated industries and leverage one of our most critical assets, our core data and analytics team that has always been on the leading edge for core data and analytics services and increasingly is on the leading edge with respect to AI. Year-to-date, FLC's revenues are up double digit, and adjusted segment EBITDA is up more than 60%. Some of that is due to great things that happened in the quarter. Most of it, to me, is due to the vision, the power and the courage of the investments that FLC has made not just this year or last year but in the last 2, 3 and 4 years. Turning to Strat Com. Strat Com, as some of you may remember, was the first business that we had to turn around a decade ago. And the team, if you want to -- if you don't remember, it turned it around almost immediately. And it has been a great growth story since. But of course, just because it's a great growth story doesn't mean there haven't been zigs and zags. And Mark and the team will note we've had a lot of zigs and zags over these 10 years, including a slow period in '24. This year, Strat Com's revenue is up also double digit and its segment EBITDA is up 34%. Some of this year's results have to do with disciplined action Strat Com took in areas where it didn't think it had all the ingredients to win. But a huge amount of the growth has to do with the team's multiyear commitment to increasing our power in the core areas that aspires to win at high stakes areas like public affairs or corporate reputation, places like crisis communications or cyber communications. Strat Com has had multiple ways it's invested behind that vision over the last few years. But the primary one has been to add talent wherever it is founded a bit from the outside but actually a lot inside committing to promote that talent. When the talent was ready, even if that happened to be in a quarter that was slow. If you look at the SMD headcount in Strat Com today, 2/3 of the SMDs are new within the last 5 years, promoted during good times but also with conviction during slow periods. It is that sort of conviction that has allowed us through the various flat periods and the zags to always return this business to its powerful growth trajectory and why we have so much conviction in it going forward. Let me try to take the same principles and apply them to the businesses that have faced challenges this year. As you know, Tech is having a tough year and the Compass Lexecon business and E Con has been hit substantially this year on the top line but even more on the bottom line. The questions we look at always when we have base businesses like that or two. First, do we have confidence in the team? Do we have confidence in the propositions that, that team is driving? And then second, depending on the first one, what did we do? And when Andersch was struggling in Germany, we looked at it. And we ended up saying, wow, this is a great team. Yes, okay, there's moratoria in bankruptcy. This is a great team. So we move to second question which is, okay, how do we support this great team and get it back on the growth trajectory that it deserves? And we have the same sort of discussions and questions when we looked at Australia and many of these other situations I talked about. So we applied those lenses to these businesses. When you look at the Tech business and you apply that lens, you say, wow, we've had the fastest organic growth in the industry in the last 5 years. You find a team that for a long time has been an early adopter of the most advanced technologies, machine learning and AI technologies, topics that are critical for the future. When you talk to our clients, particularly our most prominent clients, you hear people and they see us ever more as their go-to partner for the highest stakes, most complicated investigations, litigation, M&A-related second requests. I walk away from those thoughts and those conversations with the sense that this is a business that even if a quarter is slow, we should be not only investing in but be excited to invest in. When you look at Compass Lexecon, you see, yes, we look lots of rainmakers this year. But you also say that Compass Lexecon is still by far the leading brand in the industry. I think just 3 weeks ago or 4 weeks ago, we had 66 Compass Lexecon professionals named to Lexology's 2025 competition guide, of course, once again, by far the most of any firm. We see that no firm has the global scale that we have, not only in the U.S. and Europe but in Latin America and China. And when I talk with Dan Fischel in the European and American and Asian leadership teams, people acknowledge, yes, we've lost some rainmakers. I think collectively, the belief is that today, we have the best set of experts that this firm has ever had. We believe we do, by the way, we need to get out there and introduce some of these experts to the market, something Compass Lexecon has never been that focused on. But I think everyone in Compass Lexecon is extraordinarily excited about the talent we've been able to attract to the firm and its prospects. And so when we looked at these two businesses, we come to the conclusion that these are businesses, these are teams of propositions that are worth investing in. And so then you have to figure out what those investments look like. In the Tech business, it's meant first that we continue to go after talent. A number of our competitors in this industry are stressed and that always creates a good opportunity to go after talent, and use that talent to support geographical expansion or further movements into AI topics or other relevant business expansions. But in this case, at this point in time, it is clearly also meant continuing to make sure we are investing in Tech's leadership position in AI. And so this year, we've done those sorts of investments. We are on the course of the year, and we will continue to do so. In Compass Lexecon, the most important initial investment was in retaining our staff in the face of competitive pressures. More recently, what we found is a lot of terrific people wanted to join us. And so in addition to retaining the bulk of our staff, we've announced 28 new senior hires in Compass Lexecon this year, by far a record for Compass Lexecon. And a move that, of course, is a very positive thing for the medium term, but we also all know how that works out in the near term, which is the cost comes first and the revenue comes later. the set of results that you clearly see reflected in this quarter's P&L. We make these sorts of investments in Tech and Compass Lexecon and previously in Corp Fin and FLC and Strat Com for multiple reasons. We have three core constituents we have to make sure we'll keep in our minds. And so we make these investments for all three. First of all, it's important for our clients. Our brand position is to be the leaders serving our clients. So we have to continue to invest behind leading experts in leading-edge technologies. So we make our investments for clients. We also do it because it's important that our best professionals who are killing themselves in the market, know that we're willing to support them not only when the quarters are good, but during quarters that are challenging. We also do it with a view towards our shareholders, where we believe we have fabulous businesses or sub-businesses, where making these sorts of investments will allow them over time to resume what they've been in the past, great businesses who do have zigs and zags, but have zigs and zags around fundamentally upward sloping lines. Paul is eager to do his first CFO report, so let me close in a minute here. And let me close by coming back to the quarter if I can. $2.60 of EPS. $2.60 in the face of all the investments we are making and all those headwinds I talked about. Guidance for the year that suggests notwithstanding all those investments, notwithstanding all those headwinds, unless something goes unexpectedly wrong in the fourth quarter, this team will deliver the 11th year in a row of adjusted EPS growth. It's, of course, great to have a great quarter and it's nice to have another up year. As nice as those results are. And they're nice in and of themselves, of course, right? To me, what's far more significant is when you think about what we just discussed, the mechanisms that allowed us to get here. Because the power of those mechanisms that we've now seen across all of those segments, and not just this year but across all of those years and across multiple geographies, to me, suggests more than a good quarter or a year. They suggest resilience. They suggest underlying power and they suggest lasting power and extendability. To me, they leave me ever more convinced and, probably I didn't need that much convincing, but ever more convinced about the incredible potential of this enterprise going forward. It leaves me, and I hope, you believing that we are so much closer to the beginning of this journey that the company can be on than we are to the end. With that, let me turn this over to Paul. Paul?