To be abundantly clear: I'm asking that this be addressed in the written guidance/FAQs for flaggers, for moderators, and to which users flagged for plagiarism are directed. It's not a hot path and doesn't need to be in the UI, but should be found in the linked additional information.
What protections exist to detect and prevent deletion of original content that may also exist elsewhere?
We all hope that plagiarism flags are raised while content is very new, making it impossible that the post on SO is upstream of the identical copy elsewhere. (But see 1 below).
But realistically this won't always be the case. And we know that many other sites plagiarize from Stack Overflow, both automated en-masse copying (which tends to still look like Q&A after being scraped), and focused manual copying by individuals, which may result in inclusion in blog posts, white papers, or even printed books. And those copies may not be truthful about the date/time they appeared.
1 Another possibility is that the author of the content used it both on and off of Stack Overflow, which is permissible.
There may be good reasons for not disclosing the web link to the other copy of the content, which is believed to be the upstream source, to the poster... but not doing so makes it more difficult for the author of the content to defuse mistaken plagiarism accusations.
What is the expected experience for an author who wrote the content and later has it wrongly deleted "for reasons of plagiarism" by a moderator?