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Another trial (Posted on 2002-05-08) Difficulty: 2 of 5
Residents A, B and C, each of whom are either a Liar or a Knight are brought to stand trial for a crime only one of them commited.

Each person accused one of the other two, but the records do not show who exactly. As it turned out, A was the only Knight of the three.

Curiously enough, if each person switched their testimony, and accused the remaining suspect (not themselves, and not who they accused originally), then B would come out to be the only Knight.

Who was the real culprit in the case?

See The Solution Submitted by levik    
Rating: 3.2000 (10 votes)

Comments: ( Back to comment list | You must be logged in to post comments.)
No Subject | Comment 1 of 7
Since noone accused themselves, we can tell from the first situation that A is not the culprit.

Given the second situation and using the same logic, B is not the culprit.

So it must be C.

  Posted by Happy on 2002-05-08 06:29:54
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