First of all, maybe part of the issue is learning to get along with the audit system. The audits have a very specific set of rules - they do things the same way every time (as they are automated). Maybe it isn't the ideal system, but it serves its purpose pretty well. Of course the username and reputation will be hidden in the "first post" queue - if you could see that the user who posted the answer has nearly 20k reputation, you would of course realize that it's an audit because it obviously wouldn't be the user's first post. Likewise, of course the system hides the votes, because then you would be able to judge the post by the number of votes and not its content.
Second of all, and more importantly, you should be going by what's presented to you - which in this case, is a fairly high quality answer by a user who appeared to you to have 1 reputation. You got yourself in trouble when you opened the question in a new window and saw that same post with high votes. People more experienced with audits know that this is the way the audit system works, and that is the same post. If that's going to confuse you, then don't even open the question in a new page. Judge what you're presented.
I think that in the end, you overthought this a little bit. Yeah, it's possible that somehow a user posted a carbon copy of another answer, that was very heavily downvoted and flagged, subsequently deleted, and then chosen to be an audit because of all of the negative actions taken on it. But not very likely. If you had followed the process that was intended, and reviewed exactly what you had been presented, you would have been fine.
Let me add as an afterthought the gist of some of the comments as well. I'm not sure what you mean by "flagged it accordingly," but you seem to imply that you flagged that answer as spam. Take a look at this answer to get a bit more info on what constitutes spam and what doesn't. This post certainly is not spam by StackOverflow's definition.