I regularly teach programming classes. Like most instructors, I occasionally see students that I know to be both lazy and weak turn in suspiciously good projects and sometimes am able to locate online code that they had plagiarized. Some schools use automated tools for that, but mine doesn't. I don't obsess about it, but if something jumps out at me I'll sometimes spend the time to investigate it. Stack Overflow is naturally one of the places that I'd search.
But -- I just observed someone post what seems like a clear homework problem in the Python tag (a problem with this tag since so many intro-to-programming courses are now taught using Python -- which brings to mind this wonderful essay). Within minutes someone answered the question, giving a complete solution, and then shortly after that OP deleted the question. It occurred to me that this opens up a sort of loophole for easy plagiarism (I don't know if this was OP's intent -- they could have just been responding to the down-votes that their question received).
This loophole can be at least partially closed by making all deleted questions (and not just the user's deleted questions) searchable for a period of time, say 30 days. Since 10k is the threshold for viewing deleted questions that can also be made for searching deleted questions, though there could also perhaps be a way for instructors with less than 10k rep be able to signup with an instructor status that allows them to do the searching.