Louisiana Supreme Court
Henry Alpert is an experienced data professional currently serving as a Data Analyst at the Louisiana Supreme Court, where responsibilities include system administration for a statewide database and designing SQL queries for data analysis. Previous roles include Data Integration Engineer at Data Piper, where ETL pipelines were created, and Data Analyst I at Pivotal Engineering, LLC, focused on data visualization and geographic data quality assessment. Henry completed a data science bootcamp at Flatiron School, where a capstone project involved NLP techniques. Early career experiences include working as a Marketing Consultant and Copywriter for numerous clients, an Instructor at Tulane University, and an English Teacher in Japan with the JET Programme. Henry holds an MFA in Writing from the University of New Orleans and a BA in Philosophy from the University of Michigan.
This person is not in any offices
Louisiana Supreme Court
The Louisiana Constitution distributes the powers of government of the State of Louisiana into three separate branches -- legislative, executive and judicial. Except as provided by the Constitution, no branch of government can exercise the power of another branch of government. This principle is commonly referred to as the constitutional "separation of powers." The judicial power of the state, which is the power to interpret the Constitution and the laws of this state, is vested in the Judicial Branch of Government, made up of a supreme court, courts of appeal, district courts and other courts authorized by the Constitution. The Supreme Court is Louisiana's highest court and is domiciled in the City of New Orleans.