Ok. I think there's one thing that should be stated explicitly in this thread that may not have been getting enough attention (and which in my own comments I probably should have been more explicit.)
The options are not "CERN screwed up" and "neutrinos can move faster than c." I'm not sure about the actual probabilities but P(neutrinos can move faster than c|CERN didn't screw up) is probably a lot less than P(Weird new physics that doesn't require faster than light particles|CERN didn't screw up).
I did say "Error caused by new physical effect. P = 0.15" right in the first comment in this thread. It's just that we don't know enough about the design of the experiment to say much about it. Do you know how the neutrinos were generated/detected?
http://www.nature.com/news/2011/110922/full/news.2011.554.html
http://arxiv.org/abs/1109.4897v1
http://usersguidetotheuniverse.com/?p=2169
http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=3027056
Perhaps the end of the era of the light cone and beginning of the era of the neutrino cone? I'd be curious to see your probability estimates for whether this theory pans out. Or other crackpot hypotheses to explain the results.