I recently reported this answer (10K only) for being an obvious spammer. I seem to recall I saw this in SO CVR, but by the time I got to it, the question was deleted by its author. The spam answer was:
DQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKUDQWSWFETGRETRJYKU
(There's an outside possibility that a reasonable answer was given, and then it was vandalised during the grace period for editing, but given the answer author has no other material, I think it would be better to report it than not to).
It turns out that on deleted answers (or, perhaps, answers on deleted questions) the only flagging option available is this:
[*] in need of moderator intervention
A problem not listed above that requires action by a moderator. Be specific and detailed!
So I added a custom message thus:
Worth deleting this user as a potential spammer? – halfer 2 days ago
In reply I received this from a moderator, and I can't tell if it is merely pasted boilerplate or written with a measure of exasperation:
declined - Using standard flags helps us prioritize problems and resolve them faster. Please familiarize yourself with the list of standard flags: see What is Flagging?
There seems to be an issue here. Perhaps one of these applies?
- I should be able to alert moderators to potential spam in an answer even if the question is deleted, using a specific "spam" designation
- If the reply from a moderator was boilerplate, and if the moderation UI can allow or disallow certain boilerplate messages to be sent, then perhaps it should not offer it as an option where the question is deleted (since it makes no sense to require a spam designation from ordinary users where the flagging UI does not allow it)
- Moderators just need to check whether the question is deleted (and also need to remember that asking for spam designations is not possible on such questions). I dislike this the least since I think mods are overburdened as it is, and I'd rather the UI guided them a bit more.
;-)