@ scotman
"Don't know the specific answer but it always seems odd to me to have an even number on any panel that is required to reach a decision."
Juries don't work like that, though: because they decide matters of fact in a criminal case, which need to be proved "beyond reasonable doubt," the decision either has to be unanimous, or the trial judge can choose to accept a majority verdict from at least 10 of the 12 jurors. Anything less than that, and the case supposedly can't have been proved "beyond reasonable doubt."
It's not like the Supreme Court, where a majority decision can be made by e.g. 4 of 7 judges with the other 3 dissenting. The difference is that Supreme Court judges determine controversial issues of law ("is doing this legal?"), whereas juries are there to decide issues of fact ("did they do this?").
Sometimes you end up with fewer than 12 jurors e.g. if one of them needs to drop out. But 12 is the starting point.