Following the case of What is the problem with this review queue audit question?, I'd like to highlight that if a post survived for weeks without being flagged, then it's unlikely that it's in a state easily identifiable as being spam. Actually, if an old post is marked as spam, then it's likely to be for a reason that even attentive reviewers can't find out from the review page itself. For instance, in the linked case, post was 3 years old and the reason for spam was "repeated undisclosed affiliation", but this aspect of repetition can't be discovered from the review page itself.
I'm aware that many on Meta, from experience, recommend reviewers to look outside the review pages to systematically discern audits, but if we could have self-contained audits (discernible from the review page itself), that would give more fairness to reviewers. Otherwise, honest reviewers, falling into seemingly invisible traps, will be discouraged or will recourse to scripts to bypass audits altogether.
Suggestion: if a post is more than 9 days old and is marked as spam:
- either don't use it for audits
- or warn on the audit page that the post was marked as spam, to hint reviewers