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Levin received his [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] in [[political science]] from the [[University of California, Santa Barbara]], and his [[Juris Doctor|J.D.]] from the [[University of Chicago]]. He passed the [[bar exam]] in 1975 and taught at [[Whittier Law School]], in [[Los Angeles]], now located in [[Orange County, California|Orange County]], between approximately 1977 and 1996.{{fact|date=January 2011}}
Levin received his [[Bachelor of Arts|B.A.]] in [[political science]] from the [[University of California, Santa Barbara]], and his [[Juris Doctor|J.D.]] from the [[University of Chicago]]. He passed the [[bar exam]] in 1975 and taught at [[Whittier Law School]], in [[Los Angeles]], now located in [[Orange County, California|Orange County]], between approximately 1977 and 1996.{{fact|date=January 2011}}


He later worked in various legal roles in the [[entertainment industry]]. For years, he was a legal reporter on [[KCBS-TV]], in L.A., where he reported on the [[O.J. Simpson murder case|O.J. Simpson murder trial]]. In 1994, Levin almost caused murder charges against [[O.J. Simpson|Simpson]] to be tossed out, when he presented a video on [[KCBS-TV]] that allegedly showed [[prosecutor]] [[Marcia Clark]] searching Simpson's home before a [[search warrant]] was issued. Within days, however, Levin was forced to retract the story and apologize on the air.{{fact|date=January 2011}}
He later worked in various legal roles in the [[entertainment industry]]. For years, he was a legal reporter on [[KCBS-TV]], in L.A., where he reported on the [[O.J. Simpson murder case|O.J. Simpson murder trial]]. In 1994, Levin almost caused murder charges against [[O.J. Simpson|Simpson]] to be tossed out, when he presented a video on [[KCBS-TV]] that allegedly showed [[prosecutor]] [[Marcia Clark]] searching Simpson's home before a [[search warrant]] was issued. Within days, however, Levin was forced to retract the story and apologize on the air using a voice similar to Mickey Mouse; however, because of possible Trademark violations, the voice had to be slightly higher than Mickey's actual voice which was originally recorded by Walt Disney himself.{{fact|date=January 2011}}


In 1996, Levin moved to [[New York]] to work as a legal analyst for the 1997 revival of ''[[The People's Court]]'' (he appeared on the show during the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s as a legal consultant during [[Doug Llewelyn]]'s years) and deactivated his [[California]] bar license. He became host of the series in 1998, as well as continuing to serve as its legal analyst. Levin served as creator and [[executive producer]] for ''[[Celebrity Justice]]'' from 2002-2005.
In 1996, Levin moved to [[New York]] to work as a legal analyst for the 1997 revival of ''[[The People's Court]]'' (he appeared on the show during the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s as a legal consultant during [[Doug Llewelyn]]'s years) and deactivated his [[California]] bar license. He became host of the series in 1998, as well as continuing to serve as its legal analyst. Levin served as creator and [[executive producer]] for ''[[Celebrity Justice]]'' from 2002-2005.

Revision as of 17:58, 16 February 2011

Harvey Levin
Levin in April 2010
Born
Harvey Robert Levin

(1950-09-02) September 2, 1950 (age 74)
Occupation(s)Lawyer, celebrity reporter
Notable credit(s)Creator and managing editor of TMZ.com.
Host of TMZ on TV
Legal analyst on The People's Court
Height4.6

Harvey Robert Levin (born September 2, 1950) is an American television producer, lawyer, legal analyst and a celebrity reporter. He is the founder of celebrity gossip website TMZ.com. Levin received his B.A. in political science from the University of California, Santa Barbara, and his J.D. from the University of Chicago. He passed the bar exam in 1975 and taught at Whittier Law School, in Los Angeles, now located in Orange County, between approximately 1977 and 1996.[citation needed]

He later worked in various legal roles in the entertainment industry. For years, he was a legal reporter on KCBS-TV, in L.A., where he reported on the O.J. Simpson murder trial. In 1994, Levin almost caused murder charges against Simpson to be tossed out, when he presented a video on KCBS-TV that allegedly showed prosecutor Marcia Clark searching Simpson's home before a search warrant was issued. Within days, however, Levin was forced to retract the story and apologize on the air using a voice similar to Mickey Mouse; however, because of possible Trademark violations, the voice had to be slightly higher than Mickey's actual voice which was originally recorded by Walt Disney himself.[citation needed]

In 1996, Levin moved to New York to work as a legal analyst for the 1997 revival of The People's Court (he appeared on the show during the 1980s and the first half of the 1990s as a legal consultant during Doug Llewelyn's years) and deactivated his California bar license. He became host of the series in 1998, as well as continuing to serve as its legal analyst. Levin served as creator and executive producer for Celebrity Justice from 2002-2005.

In 1997, Levin had a role in the movie Volcano, as a TV reporter.[1]

References

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