I recently came across this question (web archive for <10k users) in a different meta post.
The post is now deleted, but before that, it was closed as a duplicate back in 2009 (I believe it was January, but I can't see the question to confirm). However, it was a very odd duplicate/closed question:
- It was closed by a single user (gbjbaanb) who is not a moderator currently. And the name is not familiar to me as moderator or employee from the recent past (since moderators lose their diamond on their actions once they are no longer a mod there would be no outward sign of a mod closure). And this was well before gold tag badge users has the power to unilaterally close questions as duplicates.
- The duplicate message was missing. In that time, the duplicate message was edited into the question, rather than added as a banner, so it was possible to edit the message out. However, there was no revision history on that post, so an edit to remove that header never happened (or was not recorded). And the closure happened well after the 5 minute grace period expired, so it wasn't even a quick closure and edit to remove the header.
- When manually going to the revisions URL (
posts/421902/revisions
), you can see the post was actually closed as a duplicate of 2 different questions (and also you can see there was no 2nd revision created to add the duplicate notice, or 3rd revision to remove it).
So I guess I have 2 questions:
- What happened to the duplicate message? How did it get removed when there was no revision to add it or remove it? Or did it never exist?
- What special powers did the close voter have that allow him/her to close the question as a duplicate of 2 different posts on his/her own? Was he a mod at the time (although that wouldn't address the 2nd duplicate link)? Or were there other close voters who have been scrubbed from the revision history?
I have no specific interest in the question. It is off-topic now and was rightfully closed, but I am only curious about why this specific question appears to be unique in the circumstances around its closure.