- Thu Dec 27, 2018 7:20 pm
#61435
Hi AM4747,
The key to answering the question is in the word "or." What the sentence: "...if Samantha was the murderer, she would have avoided leaving behind footprints or fingerprints" means, is that at least one of footprints or fingerprints would have been absent. In this case we are told that fingerprints were found and they weren't Herbert's, yet Herbert and Samantha were in the office. This does not get us to the point of knowing that Samantha murdered Jansen. The "or" in the sentence means that maybe she did leave the fingerprints, but is just as likely that she would have only left footprints, and since we only know about fingerprints it doesn't mean it was her.
Answer C solves that problem by saying that it was either Samantha or Herbert. And since the stimulus already told us it wasn't Herbert it makes it so that the 'maybe' we posed above is erased, and it was definitely Samantha who left the fingerprints.
Hope that helps!
Malila
The key to answering the question is in the word "or." What the sentence: "...if Samantha was the murderer, she would have avoided leaving behind footprints or fingerprints" means, is that at least one of footprints or fingerprints would have been absent. In this case we are told that fingerprints were found and they weren't Herbert's, yet Herbert and Samantha were in the office. This does not get us to the point of knowing that Samantha murdered Jansen. The "or" in the sentence means that maybe she did leave the fingerprints, but is just as likely that she would have only left footprints, and since we only know about fingerprints it doesn't mean it was her.
Answer C solves that problem by saying that it was either Samantha or Herbert. And since the stimulus already told us it wasn't Herbert it makes it so that the 'maybe' we posed above is erased, and it was definitely Samantha who left the fingerprints.
Hope that helps!
Malila