As a moderator, I take accusations of plagiarism seriously. Plagiarism is a personal pet peeve of mine, largely because I come from an academic background and almost had my career ruined by someone who attempted to take credit for my work.
That said, here is how I handle people accused of plagiarism. First, I verify the claims. You'd be surprised at the number of people who accuse others of plagiarism just because they both arrived at the same snippet of code independently (or they just want to destroy their competition). I need to see clear indication that something was copied from something else, usually involving copied wording.
Once I've established that a post was copied from somewhere else without proper attribution (and no, just tacking a link on the end of an entirely copied answer is not proper attribution), I leave a comment to that effect and delete the post. This isn't so much to bring this to the attention of the poster, but to act as a reference for when people question why something was deleted. I don't edit the post to provide proper attribution, except in rare cases, because I consider that burden to be on the poster if they want their content to be restored.
Next, I will examine if this is a pattern of behavior for this person. Is this the only post they've plagiarized? If it is, and they haven't done this before, I tend to move on and work on other things.
If they have plagiarized more than one post, we have a standard moderator message of warning about this. That message is then sent to the user, which clearly states that plagiarism is unacceptable here and that all content must be properly attributed to the source (with guidelines on how to do so).
We do not suspend at this point, because it has been our experience that many users from certain areas of the world do not realize that what they are doing is wrong. Therefore, we try to educate these users before taking more serious action. In the vast majority of cases, that's all that is needed to get them on the right track.
However, certain people still keep doing this despite warnings. It is at that point that we impose more serious penalties. Suspension of an account comes with the next incident of plagiarism, and we can even delete accounts if it is clear that they will never contribute anything original.
If there is a combination of plagiarism with voting fraud, we've been known to skip warnings and go straight to account suspension or deletion. Ultimately, each case is a judgment call by the moderator involved, but that's how I handle accusations of plagiarism.
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in the top bar. Or would that interfere with other ways in which warnings are currently used by mods?