Did I miss that is was marked an answer in the upper left of the page? Yes, yes I did…
Yes, yes you did (10k+ only).
…but those that actively edit and review first posts and answers know it can be easy enough to miss when you're engaged in reading the post.
What? So, you're saying that when you are actively reviewing and thoroughly engaged in the process, it is easy to miss the fundamental nature of what you're reviewing? I mean, if so…this seems like a serious impediment to your ability to make accurate and helpful reviews.
My access to the review queues was suspended for five days. This appears to be a manual suspension as I did not fail an audit.
Yes, indeed. This was a manual suspension by a diamond moderator. Specifically, me.
When I delete really obvious non-answers in response to "not an answer" flags, I like to play a little game. What I do is, I check to see who else, if anyone, reviewed that answer in one of the review queues, and what their decisions were. If I find someone who made the wrong decision, I will hand out a little suspension.
In most cases, I see these as serving more of an educational role than a punitive one. It's a way for a moderator to get a reviewer's attention and provide specific guidance on how they can improve. (Too many reviewers, for example, seem to be unaware of "not an answer" flags.)
I follow roughly the same algorithm here as do the automated suspensions. First-time "offenses" get very short suspensions (2–3 days is the standard period). For reviewers who have a long history of bad reviews, or those who have recently been suspended (either manually by a moderator or automatically by the system), I increase the suspension period, following a sliding scale.
Your history indicated that you had received an automated suspension from reviewing back in mid-January for failing an audit. As that was your first suspension, it was only for 2 days. For the second suspension, which I levied today, I determined that it was close enough in time to the first suspension that the time period should be compounded, and I therefore increased the suspension period to 5 days. (This was somewhat relaxed compared to the standard "second offense" period of 7 days.)
Is there a way to appeal this negative demerit?
Yes, on Meta. This is the raison d'être of the review-suspension tag. (For automated bans due to audits, use the disputed-review-audits tag.) Ask a question, providing a link to the reviewed post, a copy of its contents, any necessary context, and a vigorous defense.
(Pro tip: "I clicked the wrong button" is a rather weak defense, but sometimes you get points for honesty.)
I hardly agree that a suspension is warranted in a simple mistake such as this.
Well, again, I don't see this as a "simple" mistake. Failing to notice that an obvious non-answer was posted in the answer box, and failing to flag it accordingly, is literally defeating the entire purpose of the review queues and decreasing the quality of the site. What you're calling "simple", I'm seeing more as, "should have been obvious".
At the same time, as stated above, I see these types of suspensions (anything less than 30 days) as serving a primarily pedagogical purpose, as opposed to a punitive one. The goal is to make you a better reviewer, not to force you to stop reviewing. Since you clearly understand that your review was incorrect, and I trust that you will pay more attention in the future, I have lifted your review suspension.