The following question appeared in my research:
Let $G_1,G_2,G_3$ all be subgroups of $S_n$, and consider the sum
$$ \sum_{g_i \in G_i, g_1g_2g_3 = id} \epsilon(g_1) $$ that is, we only consider triplets whose product is the identity permutation, and we sum all the signs of $g_1$.
The question is: is this sum always non-negative?
EDIT:
What if we restrict $G_1$ to be the entire $S_n$? What if we restrict $G_2$ and $G_3$ to be groups of type $G_T=\{\sigma \in S_n : c(\sigma) \leq T \}$ where $c$ indicates the cycle type, and $T$ is a fixed set partition, and the inequality indicates refinement.
Update
Even with the updated version of subgroups, there is a counter-example. The three set partitions $$S=((1, 2, 3, 4), (5, 6, 7, 8)) \quad T=((1, 5),(2, 8),(3, 6),(4, 7)) \quad U=((1, 6),(2, 4, 5),(3, 7, 8))$$
give rise to a sum with value $-4$.