The full ladies' judging panel, as chosen by lot at the Obersdorf competition in October, was:
South Korea, Italy, Japan, United States, Canada, Russia, France, Sweden, Ukraine, Estonia, Slovakia, Germany, and Great Britain.
For the short program, after a second drawing, the following were seated:
South Korea, Italy, Japan, United States, Canada, Sweden, Slovakia, Germany, and Great Britain.
Sitting out were: Ukraine (Balkov), Russia (Shekhovtseva), Estonia, and France.
For the long program the four who did not judge the short program were seated, replacing (again by lot), South Korea, Sweden, United States, and Great Britain.
In summary, Korea, U.S, Sweden, and Great Britain judged the short program only. Ukraine, Russia, Estonia, and France judged the long program only. The rest, Italy, Japan, Canada, Slovakia, and Germany, judged both.
Judges and records including the scandal in these Olympics will live forever on the net. Like here:
Figure skating at the 2014 Winter Olympics – Ladies' singles Controversies
You can always find their names on Wiki.
Here is the point that I expected the pro-Adelina forces to seize on: if the Russian side truly had a big plot brewing and had power over the selection process as well, they would have assigned the Russian judge and all her allies to both the short program and the long program. Why take a chance on Yuna building up a big short program lead before the Russian side even got its turn at bat?
But one thing I am good at is number crunching. Spreadsheets are my forte.
Happy to run numbers in others ways.