As far as I know, the exact thresholds are intentionally not documented anywhere. Probably more because it's complicated than to prevent attempts to game the system, but both are valid concerns.
The best you get is this answer from Shog9 discussing the implementation of the feature, which says, in part (emphasis added):
Here's how it works:
There are two thresholds:
- Number of votes cast by the user being deleted
- Number of people affected significantly by those votes
The exact values of those thresholds don't particularly matter;
they're pretty low, but not so low that you could hit them easily
while still hiding fraudulent activity.
- If either threshold is exceeded, deletion is held up until someone reviews it. Otherwise, deletion proceeds and any votes are discarded.
- If, during review, it becomes apparent that the user is or ever was involved in voting fraud, the votes are discarded as they would
normally be.
- Otherwise, the votes are preserved.
The end result of this is that most users will still see votes being
removed along with user deletions from time to time... But rarely if
ever will these votes cause a non-trivial drop in reputation or a
sudden, wide-spread skew in post scores, which were the primary
complaints in the past.
Prior to the implementation of this feature, staff members used to have to manually perform a special deletion that did not invalidate the votes cast by that user.