Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter June 2023 — The SoCal Home

THE GIVING IT BACK AND PAYING IT FORWARD NEWSLETTER

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Happy Fathers Day to… Everyone?

You guessed it:  Fathers Day is June 18. But why should I mention this to you?

Well, since you have been kind enough to be part of our business, I wanted to take the opportunity to give you a free gift on Fathers Day. Chances are that you are not a dad, but I am sure the dads won’t mind. So I am going to go ahead and give you (and those you know) TWO very special free gifts.

Yes, TWO Gifts.

Gift #1 We will sell your home at your price, or we will buy it.*

Yes, this is the guarantee I am most famous for. And you will know that, whether it’s a super awesome real estate market or a housing recession, I have not wavered from this guarantee. The peace of mind from a guarantee like this is a fantastic gift.

I can think of none better.  My team and I are committed to results. In fact, Results-Oriented is one of our core values. For more than 30 years, people have been coming to us when they want their home sold, at their price and with the least hassle. We look forward to the next 30 years of  Guaranteed Results for L.A. homeowners.  #coreychambers #realestate #news

Your Referrals Change Lives!

Go Serve Large!!! Investing In The People Of Our Great Community.

With The Corey Chambers Team, Your Referrals Really do Change Lives!

If you or a friend are thinking about selling, make sure to choose a real estate company you can trust!

A Real Estate Company That Gives Back!

Gift #2… Donations to one of the areas Leading NonProfits, CHLA Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles. In last month’s letter, I updated you on our goal of raising $25,000 for CHLA. In case you missed it, we donate a portion of our income from home sales to help the kids.  Children’s Hospital Los Angeles is a 501(c)(3). a nonprofit institution that provides pediatric health care and helps young patients more than half a million times each year in a setting designed just for their needs. Its history began in 1901 in a small house on the corner of Alpine and Castelar Streets (now Hill St. in Chinatown) and today its medical experts offer more than 350 pediatric specialty programs and services to meet the needs of patients. CHLA provides more than $316.2 million in community benefits annually to children and families. As the first pediatric hospital in Southern California, CHLA relies on the generosity of philanthropists in the community to support compassionate patient care, leading-edge education of the caregivers of tomorrow and innovative research efforts that impact children at the hospital and around the world. YOUR REFERRALS HELP THE KIDS! Keep them coming!

Our goal this year: Raise $25,000 for Children’s Hospital Los Angeles!

Who do you know considering buying or selling a home you could refer to my real estate sales team? Not only will they benefit from our award-winning service and ironclad guarantees but the kids of Children’s Hospital will benefit too! Just give me a call or pass my number on to anyone you know considering buying or selling. My number is 213-880-9910.

Your Referrals help the Kids!

Life moves fast for some and we are eager to make the Home Selling and Buying experience a smooth rewarding one. Over the last two decades of helping thousands of families sell their home and/or buy another, we have met some wonderful, loving, caring people. People like you! As we move forward this Summer, please know we areA Real Estate Company That Gives Back!

Thank you in advance for your referrals! My number is 213-880-9910.

Go Serve Big!!! 

Corey Chambers

 

P.S. Check out the story enclosed of this amazing young person whose life was given back thanks to CHLA.

CHLA Your referrals help kids!

A real estate company with experience, proven results, and a give-back philosophy!

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members considering making a move:

You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info online, or forward the link to someone you know considering a move.

Of course, you can always call me direct as well at 213-880-9910

Why I support Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles

I grew up right here in the Greater Los Angeles Area, born in Los Angeles County at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a nasty disease and getting treated for that at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles. It was then that I began to pay closer attention to the work they do at that hospital. Since then, I have learned that it is a collection of hard-working health care professionals, most making their home right here in the Los Angeles area, all coming together for a common cause. That cause is to help young people overcome unfortunate health issues that life sometimes throws our way. Being a Los Angeles Area California native, I take pride in supporting in a way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rallies around our annual goal or raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s in their quest to heal young people when they need healing. My team and I are committed to providing outstanding results for buyers and sellers referred to us by our past clients. I have discovered that Children”s Hospital Los Angeles shares similar commitment to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations, we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.

Sincerely,

Corey Chambers

*seller and Corey must agree on price and time of possession. Corey Chambers, Broker DRE#01889449


Can a New Way to Treat a Tumor Help Kai Beat Brain Cancer?

Melissa found Children’s Hospital Los Angeles in July 2021, when she was on a frenzied search for help for her infant son. —  By Jeff Weinstock  (Courtesy CHLA)

After her infant son was diagnosed with a rare tumor, Melissa crossed the country searching for help. She found it at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles in the office of Dr. Ashley Margol, one of the few experts in an innovative therapy called MEMMAT.

Five months earlier, Kai had been diagnosed with atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor, known as ATRT, an especially menacing brain cancer with a bleak prognosis. The doctors who made the diagnosis after removing the tumor recommended that Melissa and her husband, Chasen, not intervene with treatment.

“We ran from them as fast as we could,” Melissa says. But where to? Searching out an alternative opinion was an immense effort. “Nobody said, ‘This is how we treat it, this is what we’re going to do,’ because there’s no real protocol for ATRT.”

The family moved east, picking up stakes from San Jose, California, to pursue treatment, but after four months of chemotherapy, Kai relapsed just before his first birthday. The cancer reappeared in the same area of Kai’s brain, along with more, smaller lumps nearby and on his spine. The medical team told the family that there was no answer for recurrent ATRT and discontinued Kai’s care.

Again facing a desperate scramble to find an expert who would treat Kai, Melissa contacted doctors across the country, but got nowhere until a pediatric oncologist in Texas listened to her story and thought of a colleague. She told Melissa, simply, “Call Dr. Margol.”

A new way of attacking a tumor

One of the few physicians with expertise in ATRT, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles oncologist Ashley Margol, MD, Director of the hospital’s Brain Tumor Center, administers a treatment protocol called MEMMAT developed specifically to target recurrences of the most destructive pediatric cancers, including atypical teratoid rhabdoid tumor.

Melissa says she didn’t hold back. “We emailed her, we called her. She called us back and said, ‘Get on a flight. I’ll see him in a couple of days.’”

How fast was the response? The time elapsed between the date Dr. Margol received the email and the date the family was in her office was five days.

“We were completely overwhelmed,” Melissa says. “We had no idea this even existed, this possibility. We were thinking we were only going to have a certain amount of time with our kid. And then we were presented with a little bit of hope, which was—no, you can’t describe that.”

The acronym MEMMAT is a merger of recurrent medulloblastoma, ependymoma and ATRT. It’s what’s called an antiangiogenic therapy, which means it is designed to prevent new tumors from forming by cutting off their blood supply, as opposed to standard chemotherapy, which kills active cancer cells.

“I’ll give you an example,” Dr. Margol says. “If I have a plant and I start depriving it of water, that’s one way of killing it, right? Versus if I pulled the plant out of the dirt and chopped it into 10 pieces. We know that tumors, unless they have their own blood supply, can’t grow. Eventually they wither away and die. So it’s kind of a different way of attacking a tumor.

“Honestly,” she says, “there’s no standard of care for relapsed ATRT. There’s really no standard of care for upfront ATRT. It’s such a rare disease. There are only about 50 kids in the U.S. every year who are diagnosed with it.

‘Fifty percent doesn’t mean anything’

What separates MEMMAT from conventional chemotherapy is the delivery of medicine, which goes directly into the fluid surrounding the brain through a small catheter called an Ommaya reservoir. That’s a potential advantage over the standard intravenous injection of chemotherapy, which can run up against a protective screen called the blood-brain barrier and be kept from reaching cancer cells in the brain and spine.

The therapy knocked out the several new, smaller tumors Kai presented with at CHLA, while the recurrent large tumor was removed by neurosurgeon Mark Krieger, MD, Surgical Director of the Brain Tumor Center, who holds the Billy and Audrey L. Wilder Chair in Neurosurgery. Multiple rounds of radiation followed. Last October, with repeated MRIs showing no evidence of cancer and seeing no benefit to be gained from more chemotherapy, Dr. Margol advised ending the treatment to spare Kai any further side effects. The most recent scan in January was also clear.

“Dr. Margol and the MEMMAT protocol absolutely saved Kai,” Melissa says.

However, Dr. Margol has had frank talks with the family about the chances of surviving the disease. MEMMAT is not seen as a cure, she says. It can extend and improve life, but recurrent ATRT remains a nearly insurmountable cancer.

“I don’t go over statistics because children are not statistics,” Dr. Margol says. “Fifty percent doesn’t mean anything, right? Your kid is 100%. So I don’t have that conversation. There is never a scenario where I tell someone, ‘I’m sorry, there’s nothing I can do.’

“I do tell every family, ‘My goal is to cure your child, and I’m going to do everything I can to make that happen.’ My goal is always for the family to understand that we’re on the same team from the get-go. I don’t know how the journey’s going to end, but we’re all on this train together.”

An ellipsis that signals hope

Each clean MRI report offers some relief, but hardly enough time to exhale before the next one. As each scan draws closer Melissa gets a swell of “scanxiety,” as parents of pediatric cancer patients call their nervousness before an impending test and the wait for the outcome.

“About a week leading up to MRIs, we’re irritable, we’re scared, we’re worried, we’re all the things, but we still have to function,” Melissa says. She asks her husband to check the patient portal for the results. “I can’t open the app. He does it because I just sit and shake until we know we’re in the clear for another little while.”

That’s just one of the ways Chasen has held Melissa together. She says that Kai’s 6-year-old brother, Cruz, also provides support. “It’s a family fight,” she says. “I’m only a small part of the reason we’re still upright each day.”

Kai turns 3 in July. He gets physical and occupational therapy to address the weaknesses related to his disease and treatment, including walking and talking. A stroke he suffered after his initial brain surgery impaired the right side of his face, which makes eating a challenge.

“I don’t think of them as deficits at all,” Melissa says. “I think of Kai as thriving based on what he’s been through. He’s the sassiest 2-year-old you’ve ever met in your whole life. He’s been telling us every day that he wants to go to preschool. We’re like, ‘OK, well, let’s try to get you potty-trained and we’ll take that next step,’ because he seems to be ready.”

Dr. Margol told the family that if Kai gets to two years with no appearance of cancer, then she will be comfortable saying his prognosis has improved meaningfully. Yet seeing in her notes that he has passed the one-year mark draws a small inflection of optimism. “Oh yeah, look at that,” she says.

“I told the family, ‘It’s still a very small possibility that we can cure him, but we’re certainly going to try.’ To be honest, I didn’t think we would be in this space right now where he doesn’t have any tumor, but …” In the upturn of her voice as it trails off, in all the open-ended qualifiers, in certainly, but, and small possibility, is a slender allowance of hope.

“I don’t know that I think about whether there’s going to be a cure,” Melissa says. “I live in survival mode, truthfully. I want to be hopeful. I’m just really cautious about how optimistic I am. The reality is that ATRT is a beast and can come back at any time. So it’s scan to scan. I’ll take it all day long because I didn’t think I would get the opportunity to experience such a beautiful kid, and I’m getting that. I’m grateful for it.”

  —  Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital Los Angeles

How you can help:

Refer your friends, neighbors, associates or family members who are considering making a move:

www.ReferralsHelpKids.com or call Corey at 213-880-9910


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Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog and LAcondoInfo.com with information provided by Corey Chambers, Broker, DRE#01889449 We are not associated with the homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact (213) 880-9910 or visit LAcondoInfo.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

How to Use ChatGPT to Identify a Scammer | Fraud Alert Suspected Crook

How to Use ChatGPT to Identify a Scammer: AI Helps Expose Suspected Crook

NEWS (Los Angeles, CA) — This article is about how to use ChatGPT, an AI language model, to identify potential scammers. The author, real estate broker Corey Chambers, offers dog-sitting services 🐕 on Craigslist and had a conversation with a potential client, Gordon Jason, who raised some red flags that suggested he could be a scammer. Corey decided to use ChatGPT to help determine whether or not Gordon Jason was a fraudster. ChatGPT identified several factors that could indicate that he was a scammer, including his reluctance to provide a physical address and his insistence on using a quirky payment method. Corey also did his own research and found that Gordon Jason’s phone number 904-690-1874 was a burner phone with no owner history, which led him to believe that he was an international con artist, possibly from Nigeria. The article offers advice on how to spot and avoid potential scammers, and concludes by warning readers to be cautious, and provides an example of how powerful tools can be used when dealing with suspicious people.

As we recently mentioned in a Loft Blog post, scammers are out in droves today. Here’s what just happened:

Corey Chambers and Zzuzy the Wuppy dog

Because I’ve been spending much of my time with my dog and less time showing properties during the Greater Depression of the 2020s, I began to offer dog sitting services on Craigslist, which is rife with scams. My first customer prospect is a suspected charlatan. He was moving, and asking to pay for dog boarding with an unusual payment method. Here’s how I used ChatGPT to help determine if the prospect might be a fraudster. Curious to know if A.I could detect what I suspected, I asked ChatGPT the following question, followed by pasting the suspect’s text conversation. Those who encounter suspect real estate fraud, rental ads that are too good to be true etc can use ChatGPT the same way, like this:

Corey to ChatGPT:
Based on the following text conversation, what are the chances that the dog sitting prospective customer Gordon Jason is a scammer?

Gordon Jason: My name is Gordon,my wife name is Jean,we are easy going and very kind and love to laugh. I need a caregiver, a pet sitter for my dog, and I am moving with my wife, she just got promoted and transferred from her place of work from Long Beach to Los Angeles area Corey Chambers: Hi Gordon, Thank you for your text. You’ve found the right place. What size dog and what hours would you like? Feel free to call, text or email. 213-880-9910 coreychambers@yahoo.com Gordon Jason: Good day have been stressing am glad hearing from you real quick and my dog is a puppy and his American bulldog under 20Lbs. I’ll send you his information and do you board or come to our place? And how much do you charge, what re ur rates? Corey Chambers: You can drop off the dog at 200 N San Fernando Rd, Los Angeles, CA 90031 or we charge an extra $3 per mile away. Gordon Jason: According to boarding right? 3$ per minute? Correct ? Corey Chambers: We charge $30 per day for dogs under 20 lbs, $40 per day for dogs weighing 21-40 lbs, and $60 per day for dogs over 40 lbs. The service is available for up to 12 hours per day. For those who need overnight boarding, we charge an additional $25 fee. With our 24/7 supervision, you can be sure that your dog is safe and well-cared for at all times. Gordon Jason: That count be roughly 55$ per night correct? Corey Chambers: Yes is that good for you? That’s for 12-24 hours. It costs less if you need less time. Gordon Jason: That count be roughly 55$ per night correct? I’ll send you all our dog information’s including our information’s thank you because Chunk does not have any allergies or disabilities, he’s vac is also up to date, you won’t have any problems watching him and also be ready to play cos he will play with you lot lol 😝 He will be arriving to the city before us and we would need you to board watch him and if you can walk him for just a week before we arrive I will like to know your price for that time, he will be arriving by 26th April till on the 2nd may. Just let me know your total estimate? Corey Chambers: Yes. $308 per week. $364 for 8 days. Gordon Jason: You like my dog? Do you saw his video? Corey Chambers: Yes, cute puppy. Gordon Jason: Thank you for the estimates and based on my busy schedule I’ll like to set everything up at the right time now. We are okay with the estimates and nice meeting you. What’s your name ? My name is Gordon Jason. My wife is Jean Pennington Gordon. Corey Chambers: Corey Chambers Gordon Jason: I request to pay you to secure your service before our arrival as well as for you to get some dog food, shampoo and other things we needed for him in our new home you will get it for us I’ll add the money to your payment I’ll give you the list. Thank you 🙏 Corey Chambers: Yes what’s the address to pick up from? Gordon Jason: Mr corey I tried to call you now I think k it’s voice mail and they will bring my dog to you at hour place hopefully are you able to accept a check as a means of payment? Corey Chambers: OK I will add you to my phone so you’ll be able to call I can accept cash, company check or cashiers check. I can accept PayPal credit card cash app Venmo Zelle Apple Pay etc. Can you pay with one of those? Gordon Jason: Am trying to make it simple for us cos I have a busy schedule. I’ll just forward you the check to your Email so you can just print it out and endorse the back then you can have it deposited on your Mobile, through your bank mobile App without you stressing yourself to go to the bank okay, you will get it available immediately in your bank account, Depends on what you bank with? Corey Chambers: What is the physical address of your new home or your own home? Gordon Jason: Yeah sir, I’ll send it to you sir. And hope you can do a mobile deposits sir via your bank app? Corey Chambers: yes Gordon Jason: So that I can make the payment upto to you in the morning and get it available immediately. Alright sir.

ChatGPT: Based on the conversation, there are some red flags that suggest Gordon Jason could be a scammer:

  1. He seems to avoid providing a physical address for his new home, even when asked directly by Corey Chambers.
  2. Gordon offers to send the check through email for Corey to print out and deposit, which is an unusual method of payment.
  3. He is insistent on using a specific payment method (mobile deposit via bank app) which could potentially be more susceptible to scams.

These factors indicate that there is a chance that Gordon Jason is a scammer. However, to confirm suspicions, Corey should take additional steps, such as verifying the identity of Gordon Jason and Jean Pennington Gordon, or asking for references from their previous dog sitters.

Corey to Gordon: Can you send me some verification of your identity? And do you have any references for previous dog sitters?

Naturally, the suspected scammer did not provide any verification of his identity other than a pilfered video and an illegibly blurry ASPCA certificate. Additionally, we talked on the phone, and he had an African-style accent with an international ambiance. He’s overly courteous, British style. We checked his phone number 904-690-1874 (T-Mobile US-SVR-10X/2) and BeenVerified. It’s a burner phone with no owner history. These are all earmarks of international con artists, probably in Nigeria. LOL and of course anyone who starts a conversation with “we are easy going and very kind and love to laugh” is likely on par with Hitler or Stalin in the kindness department.

ChatGPT reminds us that scammers may use an emailed check to commit fraud by sending a fake or counterfeit check to the victim through email. The victim is then instructed to print out the check and deposit it into their bank account using their mobile banking app.

The scammer will often request that the victim send them a portion of the money before the check has cleared, claiming that they need the money urgently for various reasons. The scammer may send a fake check for much more than the amount by “mistake” and then request a refund of the difference. The victim may send the money, thinking that the check has cleared, but in reality, the check is fake or counterfeit and will eventually bounce (about 7-10 days later).

The victim will then be responsible for repaying the bank the full amount of the check, and they may also be liable for any fees or penalties associated with the bounced check. This type of scam can be difficult to detect, as the victim may think that the check has cleared because the funds are initially made available in their account.

It’s important to be cautious when receiving emailed checks or other types of payment through email, especially if the sender is someone you don’t know or trust. Always verify the authenticity of the check with your bank before depositing it, and never send money to someone before the check has cleared.

We’ve helped several con artists go to jail recently, and will be more than happy to help “Mr Gordon Jason” to end his current career and seek a more honest living, or we will assist him in obtaining some free real estate — 48 sq ft behind bars to be exact. We’re registering his name and phone number with relevant authorities, starting with Loft Blog readers, the FTC and the entire Internet — Suspected criminal fraudster: Gordon Jason 904-690-1874. FTC fraud Report Number 159277065

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Pilfered puppy video use by fraudster in attempt to scam dog sitters.

Copyright © This free information provided courtesy L.A. Loft Blog with information provided by Corey Chambers, Broker CalDRE 01889449. We are not associated with the seller, homeowner’s association or developer. For more information, contact 213-880-9910 or visit LALoftBlog.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.