I reopened the question because I wanted to have a place to aggregate some stats for future reference.
It is not expressly against the rules to have multiple accounts, only to use multiple accounts to do anything you could not do with a single account. That includes voting for yourself (sock puppets), evading question bans, circumventing post limits, evading suspensions, and targeting others with downvotes or flags.
In the last month, moderators have warned or suspended 116 users for operating sock puppets to vote for their main account. The vast majority of these appear to have been used to circumvent question bans.
Likewise, moderators have warned or suspended 167 users for participating in coordinated voting schemes to boost each others' reputation (voting rings). Again, this largely was used to allow these users to evade question-asking limits.
Much of this voting fraud is detected and dealt with quietly by moderators, and it's important to us that people be able to trust the voting system. In my eyes, cleaning up voting fraud has made a noticeable improvement in the quality of certain tags by blocking question ban evaders and allowing legitimately good content to rise up.
Voting fraud is far more common on Stack Overflow than anywhere else in the Stack Exchange network, and not just due to its relative size. The fact that many people rely on Stack Overflow to do their jobs, combined with the use of question bans for low-quality posts, leads more desperate users to do what they can to keep asking questions. The common patterns in the creation of these accounts led me to ask this, but the conversation there went in a different direction.
To Laurel's point about plagiarism, we tend to message 20-30 users a month for plagiarism on Stack Overflow. Documentation has bumped that up a bit, but moderators on SO aren't entirely handling plagiarism reports for Documentation, so I can't say what the numbers are for certain. It's a much less common occurrence than voting fraud, but it's also more of a pain to deal with once detected.
Overall, the numbers of users mentioned above is tiny compared to the number of active users on Stack Overflow during that same period of time.