Career
Levingston played college football at Eastern Washington University, where, as a senior, he earned seven All-American honors as a return specialist. He was also named first-team All-Big Sky Conference as a kick returner. He scored 12 touchdowns and totaled 1,597 all-purpose yards during his senior year at Eastern Washington.
Livingston also is the leader for Division I-Associate of Arts and is fifth on the all-time National Collegiate Athletic Association list in punt returns averaging 20.8 yards.
He broke or tied seven I-Associate of Arts records including kickoff returns for a touchdown in a game (three) and season (three), kickoff return yards in a game (326), average kickoff returns in a game (652), yards in kickoffs and punt returns in game (349) and touchdowns on kickoffs and punt returns in a single game (three) and season (six). NFL and NFL Europa career
Levingston was originally signed by the New York Giants in 1999 and spent two years on the team
Eventually, he was released from the team and allocated to NFL Europa with the Amsterdam Admirals in 2000, where he earmed All-NFL Europa honors for his contributions on special teams. Canadian Football League career
After being cut by the Edmonton Eskimos during their 2001 training camp, Levingston caught on with the Toronto Argonauts.
Since being signed in 2002, Levingston has developed into one of the Canadian Football League"s best kick returners, earning Canadian Football League Special Teams Player of the Week honors ten times in his career to go along with earning East Division All-Star honors in 2003 and 2004.
On June 28, 2007 in a game against the British Columbia Lions, Levingston broke a Canadian Football League record when he returned a missed field goal by Paul McCallum for a 129-yard touchdown. That record has since been tied by his then teammate Dominique Dorsey on August 2, 2007. On August 30, 2007, Levingston was released by the Argonauts.
On November 4, 2007, Levingston was signed by the Montreal Alouettes.