I am a little bit confused about the correctness of the following statement. Could you check please, if my small "proof" is correct?
Let $X_{1}, \ldots, X_{n}$ be a i.i.d sequence that follows a normal distribution $X_{i}\sim N(\mu, \sigma^{2})$ and $I_{i}$ an indicator with:
\begin{equation*} I_{i}= \begin{cases} 1 & \text{if} X_{i}<\mu\\ \frac{1}{2} &\text{if} X_{i}=\mu\\ 0 & \text{if} X_{i} > \mu \end{cases} \end{equation*}.
I have to show that $\frac{1}{n}\sum\limits_{i=1}^{n}X_{i}I_{i}$ is normally distributed.
I had the idea to prove it with the induction:
for n=1: Since
\begin{align*} XI=\begin{cases} X & \text{if } X<\mu\\ \frac{1}{2}\mu &\text{if} X=\mu\\ 0 & \text{if } X > \mu \end{cases} \end{align*}
and $\mu, X\sim N(\mu, \sigma^{2})$ $XI$ is normally distributed.
Then the similar derivation for n=n+1
Is this way correct?
Thank you so much in advance!!!