Domino Harvey
Template:Short description Template:EngvarB Template:Use dmy dates Script error: No such module "infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".Script error: No such module "Check for clobbered parameters".Template:Wikidata image Domino Harvey (7 August 1969 – 27 June 2005) was an English bounty hunter in the United States. She came from a well-to-do background, being the daughter of Laurence Harvey and fashion model Paulene Stone. Harvey's fame was increased posthumously by the 2005 release of the film Domino, which was loosely based on her life, in which Harvey was portrayed by Keira Knightley.
Early life
Harvey was born on 7 August 1969 in Hammersmith, London, to the actor Laurence Harvey and fashion model Paulene Stone.[1] Laurence Harvey was still married to Joan Cohn until 1972; he married Stone shortly after divorcing Cohn.Template:Sfn After Laurence Harvey died of cancer in 1973, Stone raised Domino in Belgravia, a very affluent area of London.Template:Sfn As a girl, Harvey was a tomboyTemplate:Sfn and enjoyed playing with action figures. She later recalled that she studied martial arts and frequently fought other children.Template:Sfn She attended four boarding schools, including Dartington Hall and Frensham Heights, and was expelled from some of them.Template:Sfn
Career
Harvey dropped out of school as a teenager to pursue a career in modelling,Template:Sfn but did not enjoy it. She later claimed to have attended the Lee Strasberg Institute and been represented by the Ford Modeling Agency; in a 2005 article, Aida Edemariam of The Guardian noted that she was unable to verify these claims independently, no-one having any recollection of Harvey.Template:Sfn Harvey studied sound engineering and worked as a DJ at several clubs in London,Template:Sfn managing one of them.Template:Sfn Around that time, she lived in Notting Hill and also designed and sold T-shirts at Kensington Market, London.Template:Sfn At age 19, after spending time on a kibbutz in Israel,Template:Sfn Harvey moved to Southern California,Template:Sfn where her mother had relocated years earlier after marrying the American businessman Peter Morton.Template:Sfn Harvey had previously resisted the idea of moving to the United States.Template:Sfn
In California, Harvey initially started working as a DJ at clubs in Los Angeles.Template:Sfn She then worked on a ranch near San Diego, and served as a volunteer firefighter in Boulevard, California.Template:Sfn At that time, her friends trained her in the use of firearms.Template:Sfn After serving as a volunteer firefighter for a year, Harvey trained as an EMT and took courses in fire science. In 1993, she unsuccessfully applied to the Los Angeles Fire Department, and then enrolled in a short course to become a bail recovery agent, or bounty hunter.Template:Sfn
Bounty hunting
After completing a bail recovery agent training course, Harvey began working with the teacher of the course, Ed Martinez, at a bail bond agency in South Los Angeles run by Celes King III.Template:Sfn As one of very few women working as bounty hunters in the United States, she primarily sought drug dealers and thieves, but occasionally tracked murderers. She enjoyed the work, and Martinez later said she was one of the most skilled bounty hunters he knew.Template:Sfn She primarily worked with two other bounty hunters when tracking fugitives.Template:Sfn During their operations, she occasionally posed as a lost tourist.Template:Sfn
Harvey collected swords and knives,Template:Sfn and kept AK-47s in her apartment. As a bounty hunter in the mid-1990s, Harvey earned roughly $30,000–40,000 annually. The agency where Harvey worked was paid 10% of the bail posted by each fugitive they caught.Template:Sfn She said she chose bounty hunting for the excitement of the work, even though it was not a high-paying job.Template:Sfn She typically worked in Southern California, but on one occasion travelled across the United States to Atlanta, Georgia, to seek one of the FBI Ten Most Wanted Fugitives.Template:Sfn
Harvey lived above the garage of her mother's home in Beverly Hills, California.Template:Sfn After she began working as a bounty hunter, the Daily Mail published an article about her. Director Tony Scott read the article and contacted Harvey. They soon became friends and regularly visited each other; Scott spent time observing her while she tracked fugitives.Template:Sfn Their friendship lasted for the rest of her life.Template:Sfn
Addiction and death
Harvey entered drug rehabilitation clinics four times; each stay was funded by her mother. Scott claims that Harvey and the bounty hunters with whom she worked would often keep drugs they found when arresting criminals.Template:Sfn Martinez has said that they used marijuana, cocaine and heroin.Template:Sfn In 1997, Harvey went to a drug rehabilitation clinic in Hawaii.Template:Sfn She lived in Hawaii for two years.Template:Sfn In 2001, having returned to California, she attempted to become a bounty hunter again but was unable to find work with her previous employer.Template:Sfn
In 2003, Harvey was arrested on charges of possession of crystal methamphetamine after sheriff's deputies found the drug at her home while investigating a burglar alarm call-out. She pleaded guilty and attended a treatment program; the arrest was consequently removed from her criminal record.Template:Sfn In May 2005, Harvey was arrested on federal charges of trafficking methamphetamine; she maintained that she was innocent.Template:Sfn She spent three weeks in the Metropolitan Detention Center, Los Angeles.Template:Sfn She posted $1 million bail and was placed under house arrest,Template:Sfn staying at her home in West Hollywood. While under house arrest, Harvey wore an electronic monitoring ankle bracelet.Template:Sfn
Harvey continually denied that she was a drug trafficker, claiming to have been set up.Template:Sfn While under house arrest, she lived with a person whom she had hired as a "sober guardian" to help her refrain from drug use. On the night of 27 June 2005, her aide discovered her unconscious in her bath. She was taken to a hospital but could not be resuscitated. The Los Angeles County Department of Medical Examiner-Coroner determined that she had overdosed on the painkiller drug fentanyl.Template:Sfn
Film
Script error: No such module "Labelled list hatnote". A film inspired by her life, Domino, was released in October 2005. In his preparations for the film, director Tony Scott taped hours of conversations he had with Harvey about bounty hunting incidents. During filming, Harvey spent three weeks on the set. There have been tabloid reports that the ending was changed after her death and also that she was unhappy with the film's portrayal of her. The film studio has countered that she was involved with the project for nearly 12 years. Promotional featurettes for the movie include Harvey on set with the cast and crew; she contributed to the soundtrack and also attended the movie's wrap party in December 2004. Harvey herself appears at the very end of the cast credits of the film. However, she did not live to see it released.Template:Sfn
References
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Bibliography
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External links
- Template:Trim/ Template:PAGENAMEBASE at IMDbTemplate:EditAtWikidataScript error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters".
- Pages with script errors
- 1969 births
- 2005 deaths
- Models from the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham
- People from Hammersmith
- Bounty hunters
- English expatriates in the United States
- English female models
- British people of Lithuanian-Jewish descent
- Drug-related deaths in California
- Burials at Santa Barbara Cemetery
- Morton family (restaurants)