Magisch explains the how, as to the why: even people who blindly click buttons in review get review audits correct at a certain rate. Unless you're reviewing in the suggested edit queue (where all audits should be rejected), you have a certain percentage chance that clicking the same action over and over will pass an individual audit. If you're lucky, this can pass a string of audits. Moderators can look for patterns of bad reviews that slip through audits, but we don't have a lot of time to find these.
We also don't want to encourage people to review sloppily in large volumes, getting things mostly right but making many mistakes along the way.
Anecdotally, I've seen many cases of bad or completely inattentive reviewers who would have had legitimate review bans nullified by your proposal. They would have continued to do damage to the site by letting bad content in, instead of being stopped.
If someone approves spam or vandalism, it doesn't matter how many audit passes they had before that. I'm not saying that every audit is as obvious as that, and we certainly have problems with bad audits from time to time, but audits do tend to work well to catch problematic reviews.