@Kevin_Lowe:
Yes, of course it wasn`t an "advanced problem" in probability theory. Didn`t I mention this in my initial post?
I`ve earned some knowledge in probability theory/statistics due to my university education, so it wasn`t that difficult for me to construct this problem.
My intention was to pick one of the many scientific fields, of which you (indirectly or not) claim to have some deeper understanding and post a problem to check whether you are in possesion of the basic knowledge in this field and are able to apply it. Fortunately for you, Dan O. came to your rescue and posted a short and concise solution. It was my mistake not to ask all the others interested in this topic to post me "their solutions" via pm. However, the fact, that you were afraid of giving an attempt to solve this problem and wait for others to do the job for you gave me the impression, that you were just acting like a person, who attends unprepared and clueless an exam, finds a competent person of whom he can crib, as a result passing the exam and declaring: "Look, that was easy, let`s move on."
I mean, my goal wasn`t to show you up, but rather to get a confirmation of my feeling, that you`re sometimes (or often? I`m not sure) using scientific fields, of which you don`t know much about, to bolster your arguments.
Reading your many posts in this thread, I think, that you are anything but "scientifically illiterate", as you would call it, but that you are treading on thin ice, when you are "using science", that you (sometimes/often) hardly understand, to repeatedly declare, that you are much smarter than more than a dozen judges/jurors and a lot of (real) experts so far and tell, that you have "proven", although, which is another point, none of us has access to all the evidence in this case, that the defendants are innocent.