As we know questions with bounties on them can't be closed unless they are flagged for mod attention. The rationale seems to be that
- bounties can only be offered for questions at least two days old (and thus, presumably, close-worthy posts never get to have a bounty offered for them),
- existing close votes can be wrong so these shouldn't prevent bounties to be offered, and
- automatically refunding the bounty amount to the funder in case of allowed close-votes would open the way to foul play.
The problem is that in tags with less traffic it can easily happen that questions that should be closed go under the radar for 2 days. When a bounty is posted, these off-topic or unanswerable questions shine like beacons, drawing in all sorts of low-quality and high-quality answers.1 When custom moderator flags are raised on these questions, these take time to be handled. I've had flags raised on fairly fresh (1 day old) bounty offers, only to be handled well after the bounty was over.2 My impression is that mods are constantly somewhat overwhelmed, and they of course select their workload among the pool of waiting flags. I imagine that bounty flags are on the high-effort side of the cognitive power scale needed to handle flags, so these tend to stick around in the moderator queue.
My suggestion is to partly prioritize flags on bounty questions by distinguishing them from the pool of generic moderator flags. I could imagine that attempted close votes on bounty questions could raise this flag (in order not to have a special kind of flag introduced into the flag dialog). The 7-day time limit of bounties implies that any action taken on these posts should be done sooner than later. Due to the additional visibility of bountied off-topic (too broad, unclear, etc.) posts, they proportionally cause more harm to the site if left open. And while these flags might still be neglected due to the moderators being overwhelmed, at least they wouldn't be lost in a proverbial haystack of generic flags.
1I don't want to start a discussion about whether otherwise good answers on blatantly ill-fit questions benefit or harm the site in the long run.
2One specific example I found in my flag history: flagged bounty 25 hours after its start, flag marked as helpful 20 hours after the bounty had ended (4 days after my flag), with the reason "With the bounty now gone, you are free to vote to close."