CCJS 200 Summer I, 2020 Assignment #14 Name This assignment is due Wednesday July 7th, 11:59pm. Capital punishment law is among the most complex bodies of law in our legal system. As a result, judges make frequent errors in capital cases in terms of their rulings regarding a change of venue, the decision to sequester jurors, suppression of evidence, etc. When these errors are made, cases are often won on appeal and have to be retried or have a second penalty phase hearing. The Trial Judges Association thinks that only those judges who have received special training should sit on capital cases because these judges would commit fewer errors and there would be fewer cases lost on-repeal You decide to test this hypothesis You take a random sample of 15 judges who have received extensive training in capital punishment.jaw You match these judges with 15 other judges who have not received such training but are matched-in terms of years on the bench, experience as trial lawyers, gender, and age You want the two groups of judges to be alike in every way except in the experience of capital punishment law training. The data on your matched groups of judges is in the table shown below. The numbers in the columns "Untrained' and "Trained' are the number of cases lost on appeal for each pair of judges. Judge Untrained Trained Xo (Untrained-Trained) XD XD- ND (XD- PD) 3 0 2 3 14 14 5 10 11 12 13 14 IS Sum: 62- mean: 4.133; 41- mean: 2.733; Test the null hypothesis that the mean difference in the number of cases lost on appeal for the two groups is zero, against the alternative hypothesis that the untrained judges lose more cases on appeal Use an alpha level of .01. [Hint |: When doing calculations on Step 4, use the information from the table to calculate So first, you will need it for the statistical formula. ] [Hint 2. Concerning directionality of the alternative hypothesis, if we suspect the untrained judges lose more cases, what does this mean for the XD (Untrained-Trained) and the X D? Will it be positive or negative? "2020"