47. In some military courts, 9 judges are appointed. However, both the prosecution and the defense attorneys
Question:
47. In some military courts, 9 judges are appointed. However, both the prosecution and the defense attorneys are entitled to a peremptory challenge of any judge, in which case that judge is removed from the case and is not replaced. A defendant is declared guilty if the majority of judges cast votes of guilty, and he or she is declared innocent otherwise. Suppose that when the defendant is, in fact, guilty, each judge will (independently) vote guilty with probability
.7, whereas when the defendant is, in fact, innocent, this probability drops to .3.
(a) What is the probability that a guilty defendant is declared guilty when there are (i) 9, (ii) 8, and (iii) 7 judges?
(b) Repeat part
(a) for an innocent defendant.
(c) If the prosecution attorney does not exercise the right to a peremptory challenge of a judge and if the defense is limited to at most two such challenges, how many challenges should the defense attorney make if he or she is 60 percent certain that the client is guilty?
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