Attorney Lebov represents seriously injured people against insurance companies and corporations. Having worked on trial teams that produced some of the largest recent verdicts in Massachusetts, Attorney Lebov concentrates his trial practice on complex tort, products liability, traumatic brain injury, wrongful death, construction site, trucking, motor vehicle, and premises liability cases. He is licensed to practice in Massachusetts and Connecticut.

Prior to joining Earley Law Group, Attorney Lebov worked at a legacy products liability defense firm in Boston and one of the largest plaintiffs’ personal injury law firms in Massachusetts. Attorney Lebov graduated cum laude from Suffolk University Law School with distinction in the Legal Technology and Innovation concentration. While in law school, Harrison served as the President of the Intramural Basketball Association, the Vice President of the Law Innovation and Technology Student Association, and the Lead Blog Editor on the Journal of High Technology Law. Harrison also interned for Harvard University Law School’s Access to Justice Lab, using guided interview and document automation software to better serve underfunded communities and help unrepresented people navigate the trial court system.

Education Education
  • J.D., Suffolk University Law School, cum laude, 2017
  • B.S., Suffolk University, cum laude, 2014
Jurisdictions Admitted to Practice Jurisdictions Admitted to Practice
  • Massachusetts, 2017
  • U.S.D.C., Mass., 2018
  • Connecticut, 2019
Professional & Bar Association Memberships Professional & Bar Association Memberships
  • Massachusetts Academy of Trial Attorneys
Select Publications Select Publications
  • Using DTI to Prove your TBI is Not ‘Mild’
    American Bar Association, Law Practice Today
    The Technology Issue | June 2023
  • The Perils of Prescribing Medication and the Goldilocks Principle
    IADC Defense Counsel Journal, Vol. 86, No. 4 (2019)
  • A Darker Shade of Green: Hazards Associated with Lithium-Ion Batteries
    Journal of High Technology Law, Vol. 17, No. 1 (2016)