I'm not a mod, but I think I can still give some insight into this. I don't have access to any of the mod tools that deal with the majority of this stuff, but I'm also not bound by the moderator agreement.
Those "helper" accounts are typically called sock-puppets. Another similar type of voting-fraud, voting-rings, are multiple people that agree to up vote (or accept) each other's questions/answers to gain rep.
In any case, the fact that voting is unlocked at 15 rep means helps to limit things a little. Of course, there are serial voting scripts that will detect and reverse most serial-voting.
I've actually helped take down a whole group of accounts, spanning two sites on the network. It's a pretty epic story. I'm not sure the entire back story (it was probably more than voting fraud), but the accounts weren't up to any good and are now destroyed.
Note it's usually best to flag a mod instead of posting to meta if you suspect something's up. The first revisions of that answer were made before I figured out a bunch of the important details; it was only after subsequent research and edits that I realized that something mod-worthy was happening and flagged mods on both sites.
You might also be interested in looking at Smokey. It deals mostly with spam and abusive content, which isn't quite "cheating" in my mind. (It catches bad stuff, but at least it's usually obvious.)
I'm certain that the most common kind of "cheating" on some parts of the site (Docs and tag wikis, mostly) is plagiarism:
Includes content that is copied from another source without proper attribution.
You can look through my review history, (especially earlier on, things have died down), and see all the stuff I rejected as copied content.
For the purpose of completeness, I'm also going to mention FGITW and SCITEFGITW and SCITE (the latter has "cheater" in the name). Neither of those strategies are against the rules, but it's often considered bad form.