animuson is telling you "no", but I suspect you don't believe him:
If this was fraud, and these accounts were all created by one user, they would likely only have voted about 5 times for that user (with 4 accounts that would give 200 points on an answer). Seeing that these accounts voted ~20 times each, it would be hard to find a pattern looking at them individually, as it is disguised as a "normal voting pattern". You'd have to look at their pattern together to see if they all made votes for the same user.
Mods can't do that. But I can, and did. I wrote a query to collect all of the votes from all of the accounts you identified, and pick out the folks who got more than one vote from the pool. Then I did some deeper analysis on the voting patterns surrounding this group of users using some other tools I've been working on.
Most of the recipients of these votes were not involved in anything untoward - indeed, they'd simply written very popular questions or answers. However, a few unusual patterns quickly emerged, and it became apparent that most of these accounts were created by a small handful of users to inflate their reputation.
There were other sockpuppets involved as well.
All of the fraudulent accounts have been destroyed, and the person behind the bulk of them - who had previously been warned about engaging in this activity - was suspended. He'd spent days setting all this up, and hours just executing the votes... all for a couple hundred points that didn't even earn him any privileges. Sad.
I was pretty skeptical there'd be any fire behind the smoke here, but you proved me wrong. Kudos!
A bit of advice for the future: if you find something like this, just shoot me an email - chances are, most of the folks reading this won't be able to verify the results or already know about them (moderator Brad Larson was dealing with the culprit here, while moderator Bohemian has a similar query he uses to help identify sockpuppets), so publicly calling out folks as potentially involved fraud is risky - if you're right, you're just telling others how to avoid detection, and if you're wrong you're tarring the innocent.