Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter July 2025

The California Home
The California Home

Celebrate ‘Your’ Independence… TOO!

Owning real estate, especially your own home, is a sure-fire celebration of independence. In today’s market, many homeowners really want to make a move but are finding themselves in a catch-22 – whether to sell first or buy first. They don’t want to end up getting stuck owning two homes or none at all. I am sure you will join me in saying we can’t blame them. I also believe that you agree that this is true for ourselves and others; homeownership is good for ALL. The more who can buy a home, the more who can sell a home, the more our economy benefits. And as Jimmy Carter said, “To be true to ourselves, we must be true to others.

Fortunately, I have a special program for Home Owners wanting to move and Buyers wanting to buy in Today’s market that turns the tables on this CATCH 22.

Over the last 12+ years of selling real estate, I have been able to develop and successfully implement a program that allows me to guarantee the sale of a property. Yep, you read that right. Actually guarantee in writing the sale of a home. Obviously, a program like this gives sellers GREAT PEACE OF MIND (a true celebration of independence from fear). I guarantee, upfront and in writing, that if their home does not sell at their price and within their time frame – I will step in and buy it myself.

The conditions are simple: the seller and I must agree on the price and possession date. Buyers benefit too because we are able to ensure they get the home they want and back up their purchase with a satisfaction guarantee: if they are not happy with the home, we will buy it back. This obviously is a win-win for all involved.

This is where you come in…

Your friends, neighbors, work associates, and family members who may be considering a move can now do so and celebrate true independence from the fear of getting stuck with two homes or none at all. And remember… Your referrals help the Children… As I share with you each month, we are on a mission to raise $25,000 for the Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Helping Hands Fund. We do this by donating a portion of our income. Children’s does great work in helping kids overcome cancer and other life-threatening diseases. In fact, Kids under their care are 300% more likely to enter into remission IF they can get into the recovery center. BUT the Recovery Center depends on sponsorships and donations to keep rolling. So, YOUR REFERRALS REALLY DO HELP THE KIDS…

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, but we donate a portion of our income on every home sale to Children’s Hospital Los Angeles Helping Hands Fund. I want to make it easy to refer your friends, neighbors, associates, or family members considering making a move, so here are your options:

1. You can go to www.ReferralsHelpKids.com and enter their contact info on line or forward the link to who you know considering a move.

2. Of course you can always call me direct as well at 888-240-2500.

You and your referrals mean more than ever to my team and me. As we move forward in this new season, please know my team and I are extremely thankful for you and you’re being a special part of our business.

With all my appreciation.

P.S. The story of this young person enclosed may cause you to look at your loved ones differently. It did me. Check it out.

It’s easy to refer those you know considering buying or selling a home. Here are the Options Again:

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

Call me direct or pass my number on 213-880 9910.

Why I Support Children’s Hospital of Los Angeles

I grew up right here in Los Angeles. Born right nearby at St. Francis Hospital. I remember when I first heard about a young person close to our family suffering from a serious 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 any way that I can the good work these people do at Children’s. My team rallies around our annual goal of raising money and donating portions of our income to help Children’s Hospital in its 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 commitments to their patients. And since their services survive on sponsorships and donations we are happy to contribute and proud to support them.

After Beating Leukemia, College QB Reclaims His Football Dreams

by Jeff Weinstock

Thanks to the support of his medical care team and his own dogged determination, Davis Warren’s cancer diagnosis was only an interruption, not an end.

Davis Warren had never even had an ear infection, his mother, Terri, says, so it was odd to hear him say he felt weak and couldn’t do his normal weightlifting routine. Plus, he had those inflamed lymph nodes on the back of his neck that had not receded for three weeks.

“Davis had never missed a day of school because of sickness,” Terri says. “It was just weird for him to say, ‘I don’t feel great.’”

This was March 2019, football season had ended, and Davis, a 17-year-old star quarterback in his junior year of high school, was being courted by several major college football programs.

Expecting to discover he was just rundown, Davis’ father, Jeff, took him to urgent care, where a blood test showed an abnormally high white cell count, including the presence of irregular myeloid cells, called blast cells—a marker for leukemia—which reproduce rapidly and overwhelm the body’s volume of healthy blood cells.

Urgent care sent Davis and his father right to the Cancer and Blood Disease Institute at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, where a bone marrow test confirmed the diagnosis of acute myeloid leukemia (AML).

The bone marrow test, however, also revealed that Davis’ cancer had a favorable feature. It was the subtype called inversion 16, a more treatable form of AML that didn’t require a bone marrow transplant if Davis responded well to chemotherapy.

Under the care of hematologist-oncologist Deepa Bhojwani, MD, Director of CHLA’s Leukemia and Lymphoma Program, Davis underwent four rounds of chemo, each requiring a hospital stay of four to five weeks.

“He went home for about a week, then came back in again, and it repeated four times,” Dr. Bhojwani says.

Testing after the first round showed no presence of leukemia cells in his bone marrow, ruling out the need for a bone marrow transplant. The test was repeated after each remaining cycle of chemo and showed no leukemia cells all three times.

Through it all, Terri kept her feelings from Davis, including the devastation she felt for him. “The rug just gets taken out from underneath you,” she says. “You’re a 17-year-old kid, you’re an athlete, you have dreams and aspirations, and then it’s like, whoops.

“I remember walking into CHLA. Jeff gave me a hug and said, ‘We’ll get through this.’ From then on, you’re just strong for your kid. You have to be because they don’t need you to be a mess.”

A mild-mannered, calming presence for her patients and families, Dr. Bhojwani doesn’t typically take on the role of hype woman while handling cases inside the CBDI.

Yet when she met Davis in spring 2019, she took to rallying his spirit, exhorting him to believe in himself and his recovery and to know that he could again play football at his absolute best.

“I had a patient years ago who was in the same situation,” she told Davis. “He had leukemia. He was recruited to play college football and went on to play in the NFL.”

Test results had returned good news about the curability of Davis’ cancer, and Dr. Bhojwani urged him to stay positive. Don’t change any of your plans, she said.

“I told him that story,” Dr. Bhojwani recalls, “and I said, ‘Those dreams can happen. This is going to be over soon and then you have your whole life, so keep to that goal.’”

He would eventually go on to play in college for Coach Jim Harbaugh, famous for revving up his quarterbacks by pounding on their shoulder pads before a game. But on that day, Dr. Bhojwani’s motivational flourish was equal to anything Harbaugh could offer.

“When you’re in that position, you feel like no one understands where you’re at, what you’re going through,” Davis says. “I didn’t know anyone my age who had dealt with this. For her to bring up a tangible example, that was enough for me to realize someone’s been here before, someone’s done it. That made a big difference. Hope is an incredibly powerful medicine.”

Throughout his treatment, Davis says his emotions “came in waves.” He bounced from dark moments of questioning why this happened to him; to moments of fear and doubt, wondering whether he would survive, and if he did survive, would he play football again; and then to moments of defiant resolve, when he would vow to get back to football as good as ever. Ultimately, this third wave beat back the other two.

I threw a pass, a good throw, a 25-yard throw. I was 165 pounds and my hair hadn’t grown back yet … but that first play, I was like, ‘OK, I got it in me, it’s still there.’ Davis on the first play of his return to football

“I wasn’t going to let cancer define who I was or who I wanted to be in my life,” Davis says. “As I got further and further from my treatment I learned how I could use it as a superpower to work harder to get to where I wanted to be.”

He worked diligently with CHLA physical therapists to get his strength back. The hospital provided him with an exercise bike, and he worked out on it as much as doctors allowed.

Through the connections of his high school coach, he received encouraging messages from a host of NFL quarterbacks, such as Trevor Lawrence, Tua Tagovailoa, Kirk Cousins, and Jared Goff.

Davis rang the ceremonial bell at CHLA in August 2019, signaling the end of his chemo treatments, and he was back on the field two months later. Those who came to see if the kid could still deliver got a quick answer.

“The first game I played in,” Davis says, “the first play, I threw a pass, a good throw, a 25-yard throw. I was 165 pounds and my hair hadn’t grown back yet. I was still working through a lot of things, but that first play, I was like, ‘OK, I got it in me, it’s still there.’”

His talent got Jim Harbaugh’s attention. Then the head football coach at the University of Michigan, he called Davis with an offer of a roster spot in the fall of 2020. Davis accepted eagerly, gratefully—and determinedly. By that point, his backstory had gotten around, but he arrived on campus with singular intent.

“I didn’t want to be just the kid who had cancer,” he says. “That’s the last thing you want to be. When I first got to Michigan, I wanted to earn people’s respect for what I could do.”

He earned plenty more than respect—he won the starting quarterback job in 2024 after being a backup on Michigan’s 2023 national championship team.

After tearing the anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) in his right knee in the team’s bowl game in January, Davis is rebuilding the knee with plans on returning for his final season of eligibility, having graduated with a business degree in May.

ACL tears usually take a year to rehab. Davis has a shorter timeline in mind.

“People said the same thing about the cancer,” he says. “They told me eight months of treatment and it was 4 ½. Part of my journey was speaking things into existence. I believe very powerfully in that. I think you’ve got to believe it first before you can make it happen. So if you think you can or you think you can’t, you’re probably right.”

It took Davis a while to get to this point, where he wants to let his cancer history be known rather than conceal it so he can be a source of inspiration.

“I started to do more hospital visits and meet kids who were going through treatment,” he says. “I realized the opportunity I had to show them that you don’t have to be defined by what you’re going through, and you can get back to doing whatever it is you like to do. Once I realized the power that my story has, I could answer those questions of, ‘Why did I go through this? Why did I have to deal with this?’ That made my journey feel a lot more worth it.”

Story and photos courtesy Children’s Hospital, Los Angeles.

He’s in his sixth year of remission, and once you pass five, the likelihood of a recurrence is exceedingly low.

“Now we just monitor him for long-term side effects,” Dr. Bhojwani says.

That takes place in the LIFE Clinic, a CHLA program for pediatric cancer survivors where Davis’ heart function gets checked and his bone strength is tested, among other measures. But he will still have a presence in the leukemia clinic if Dr. Bhojwani ever needs to draw on it.

“Now if we have another kid who comes in and who has the same dream as Davis,” she says, “we’re going to tell them, ‘You know, we’ve had other patients just like you.’”

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

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

Copyright © This free information is provided courtesy of L.A. Loft Blog and Entar.com with the 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 CoreyChambers.com Licensed in California. All information provided is deemed reliable but is not guaranteed and should be independently verified. Properties are subject to prior sale or rental. This is not a solicitation if the buyer or seller is already under contract with another broker.

Corey Chambers Real Estate Newsletter June 2025 — The California Home

THE GIVING IT BACK AND PAYING IT FORWARD NEWSLETTER

corey-chambers-real-estate-newsletter-clients

Happy Fathers Day to… Everyone?

You guessed it:  Fathers Day is June 15. 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: 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 are A 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


CHLA Infant the Youngest-Ever Liver Transplant Recipient in California

Diagnosed with a rare disease called GALD, Banner received a new liver barely two weeks after he was born. —  By Jeff Weinstock  (Courtesy CHLA)

An abdominal organ transplant surgeon at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, Kambiz Etesami, MD, FACS, takes matters into his own hands during every surgery he performs. In Banner’s case, he did so before ever getting to the operating room.

Diagnosed right after birth with a rare form of liver disease, Banner, at just 2 weeks old, needed a transplant to save his life—though according to all available records, a liver transplant on a neonate had never been performed in California. To that point, Dr. Etesami’s youngest patient at the time of transplant was 4 months old.

The urgency of his case placed Banner toward the top of the waiting list for a new liver, and one was found with remarkable speed—barely more than a day. One factor was key: The donated organ came from an adult. That, says Dr. Etesami, CHLA’s Director of Abdominal Organ Transplantation and Surgical Director of Liver Transplant, led other pediatric hospitals to pass on it because it would require more expertise—namely, cutting off a small portion of the liver to fit into a baby’s abdomen.

Banner’s tiny size—he weighed only 7 pounds—would make that work even more difficult. “Not only do we have to split the liver, but we also have to cut the smaller half down further to do the transplant,” Dr. Etesami says.

It was a job that he chose not to delegate. Dr. Etesami drove down to San Diego, where the deceased donor had lived, to portion out the section of liver he needed and then to drive it back to L.A.

“It gives me added security knowing the exact anatomy firsthand,” he says.

Other pediatric hospitals’ reluctance was Banner’s good fortune, as Dr. Etesami and his team were undeterred. Adult livers are the source of the majority of liver transplants that CHLA does. “It allows our patients access to a much larger number of organs and a lower overall risk of death,” he says. “We knew we had the expertise, so we went for it.

Is it GALD—or something else?

The cause of Banner’s dire condition appeared to be gestational alloimmune liver disease, or GALD, in which the mother’s immune system produces antibodies during pregnancy that attack the baby’s liver, which it perceives as a threat.

”Those antibodies attach themselves to the liver cells, and then the immune system basically starts poking holes in them,” says Keith Hazleton, MD, PhD, Attending Physician in Gastroenterology, Hepatology, and Nutrition.

Dr. Hazelton was the first specialist to see Banner when he was transferred to CHLA at 3 days old, after it became clear that he needed to be evaluated for a liver transplant. The local children’s hospital in Orange County doesn’t have a liver transplant team.

“We felt like we got hit by a train,” Banner’s father, Kevin, says of he and his wife, Laina. Their shock was soon replaced by resolve. “It was like, ‘All right, muscle up. We’re going to do this.’”

No single test can confirm the presence of GALD, but judging from its presentation and the pathology results, doctors can come to a confident diagnosis.

“There’s not a long list of things that can cause the liver to look like this,” Dr. Hazleton says.

But there was a second reasonable possibility, he adds—a genetic condition called mitochondrial hepatopathy—as the characteristics of Banner’s disease didn’t entirely resemble GALD.

“Banner didn’t read the textbook, as I say,” Dr. Hazleton adds. “He wasn’t preterm, his labs didn’t quite fit, and the MRI and the biopsy didn’t quite fit. We felt better than 50-50, but we didn’t really know.”

Deciding to move forward with a transplant

Before proceeding straight to a transplant, Banner’s doctors had to make the difficult determination as to whether he would benefit from one. But since it wasn’t clear that Banner had GALD, they could not predict how his disease would respond to a new liver.

“We were sort of in the middle because we didn’t have a definitive diagnosis,” Dr. Etesami says. “We had signs and symptoms suggesting GALD, but it wasn’t a straightforward answer. The problem was that if it was something other than GALD, it might not get better with transplant.”

Banner’s size would also make the surgery more precarious, but with his liver failing, Dr. Etesami and his team had to make a choice.

“The family was on board, so we decided to take a chance and do the transplant, not knowing 100% if the diagnosis would hold, or if, technically, it would be possible to do it.”Kambiz Etesami, MD, PhD

“Often with children with acute liver failure,” he says, “you have this conundrum where you don’t know if they’re going to improve on their own, but if you wait, they may get too sick to even undergo the transplant. And you never know when the next good organ offer might come. He wasn’t getting better, he was getting worse.

“The family was on board,” he says, “so we decided to take a chance and do the transplant, not knowing 100% if the diagnosis would hold, or if, technically, it would be possible to do it.”

Immediate signs of a successful surgery

Banner was put on the waiting list for a liver on Feb. 6 at 1 a.m. At 9 a.m. the following morning, only 32 hours later, Kevin and Laina were told that a match had been found.

That evening Dr. Etesami and his team took Banner back for surgery, emerging 16 hours later with the youngest recipient of a liver transplant in California since data on pediatric liver transplants began to be collected in 1988.

The liver began functioning immediately, but according to Dr. Hazleton, what validated the decision to do the procedure—and indicated that the team got the diagnosis of GALD correct—was how well Banner’s other organs responded afterward.

“The liver could have started working, but other systems could have had problems if it was something else,” he says.

If the something else was mitochondrial disease, it would have begun to disrupt Banner neurologically, which has not happened.

“The fact that he’s developing normally after the liver transplant makes us really think that we made the right choice,” Dr. Hazleton says, adding that the results of genetic testing came back after the surgery and ruled out mitochondrial hepatopathy.

“All the information we have today points to GALD,” Dr. Etesami says. One important thing he can say with 100% certainty: “What we do know is that his transplanted liver is working beautifully.”

Giving credit to a collaboration

After returning home in early May, Banner has now made it beyond the most critical and dangerous first three months without any signs that his body is rejecting its new occupant. Kevin says that only now, through old photos and videos, can he and Laina see how sick Banner was.

“Seeing him healthy and acting like a normal baby and crying and eating and doing all the typical things is really a gift,” he says. “And the beautiful thing too is we can hear him now.”

For two months, Banner had to be intubated, and with the tube extending through his voice box, he was unable to make sounds.

“When he would cry, his mouth would open and you could see in his face that he was crying, but you couldn’t hear it,” Kevin says. “It would just be silence. So we’ll never not be thankful for his cry—even though it’s loud.”

Dr. Etesami credits the involvement of so many facets of the hospital for his team’s ability to pull off the surgery—and even to attempt it.

“There are very few places that would undertake this kind of transplant and even fewer that would do it successfully,” he says.

“Usually we do a difficult case with SurgeryAnesthesiology, and the Pediatric Intensive Care Unit. But here you had Surgery, Anesthesiology, the PICU, the NICCUHematologyHepatologyNephrologyInfectious Diseases, and many others—including our nursing teams, dietitians, and social workers. You had so many specialties come together to not just enable the surgery, but carry Banner through the postoperative period. His survival is a testament to the expertise available to us.”

  —  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


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.