Ah, yeah... We regularly deal with epidemics of BurningWave Core spam on Stack Overflow, and we moderators pretty much nuke it on sight. There is, unfortunately, almost no way for you as a regular user to know that, nor should you be expected to know it.
This is one of the problems with automatically-selected audits. They are not, as you said, "very effective for training purposes". This is why I (and several of the other moderators) are staunch advocates of revamping the audit system to allow us to nominate posts as audit candidates (both false-positives and false-negatives). We would select posts that are obvious and unmistakable, yet still represent corner-cases that often seem to trip up reviewers. This would be far more effective for pedagogical purposes, and I believe it would still scale adequately, as we could serve similar audits to all users without defeating the purpose.
Fortunately, failing a single audit will not cause you to be suspended from reviewing. This one didn't result in your suspension.
Audits can often be passed with 100% certainty by just taking a bit more time to study the situation. For example, try and open up the post in a new window (using the "link" link). If it's been deleted by a moderator, then you won't be able to see it (unless you have 10k+ reputation, in which case, you would see it but also see that it has been deleted and why), so you'll know that you're looking at an audit. This would have worked here, too, without requiring you to be able to access moderator-only contextual information about the associated user account.
Your rubric is fine. Library recommendations are acceptable as answers, assuming that there is some actual information provided in the body of the answer itself explaining how/why the answer solves the problem. (A code snippet is often sufficient, but not necessary. A bare link is never acceptable.) It's also often good to do a quick sanity check and make sure that the library is actually somewhat relevant to the question that was asked. A JavaScript library posed as an answer to a C++ question is probably gonna be spam, for example, but either way needs to be flagged for deletion.