I don't think it's safe to ignore a custom flag, even one raised during an audit. This post might have been a crystal-clear case of spam/abuse, but in other cases a user could decide a custom flag is really needed, maybe to report that deleting the post was wrong, or that it isn't so bad it should be used as audit (which happens more often than I would like). And there could be other valid reasons that I can't think of now.
Ideally, I think it should work like this: if the user chooses a custom flag during an audit, he should be notified that it is an unexpected choice, because a normal one should be enough, and moderators should be called for only to deal with unusual situations. Then the user gets a second choice: in light of the explanation of normal vs custom flags, does he still want to raise a custom one? If he decides a normal one is enough, good: he learnt how to use flags, no one was disturbed, he passed the audit, and everybody is happy; otherwise, the custom flag is sent to moderators, who check it as usual. If there's nothing that justifies* it, the user should learn that he chose the wrong flag, and it should be declined. And the audit should be considered failed. The user did get a very clear and specific warning after all!
Otherwise people will keep raising custom flags for everything.
If this second screen is too hard work, I'd say the flag should be sent to mods, and if it is not justified*, it should be declined. I understand you didn't want to punish him, but the fact is that he did something wrong, and the right alternative was very easy. If no one tells him, he'll keep doing it.
*To clarify, if the custom flag is "This post has been flagged as spam, but it isn't, there is indeed a link to a product, but the user states he is the author", this is what I'd call a justified custom flag, even if the moderator disagrees (for example because he thinks the disclosure is not clear enough). What I'd call unjustified is a flag like "This post is spam", "It's offensive", "It is not an answer", and so on, things for which we already have normal flags.