As far as the post and your review of it are concerned, I think you did the right thing – you spotted that the question was a duplicate (actually, a re-post by the same user) and acted accordingly by flagging it as a duplicate. Although, as mentioned in the comments, it may have been better to close the older question as the duplicate (as has now been done).
However (as you have now discovered), the review queue audit system is not without fault! There are numerous posts on Meta.SO and Meta.SE about this (here's an example) and, despite much complaining by reviewers since (essentially) the review queues were first implemented, nothing has been done to improve the way audits are selected, and nor are there any plans to do so.
I can only offer a 'tip' as to how you can avoid failing such audits in the future: In this case, it appears that you were presented with the yellow banner stating:
Our system has identified this post as possible spam; please review carefully
More often than not, this banner is an indicator that the review is an audit; opening up the post in its own window (i.e. outside the review queue) will generally reveal the fact that it is an audit: typically, the number of upvotes will be larger than in the review (for a "known good" audit), or the post will show as deleted (for a "known bad"). Though I wouldn't necessarily recommend opening up all reviews in their own windows, in cases where the system explicitly asks you to "review carefully," I think you should do so.
So, back to this particular case: This may very well be a bug in the system because the comment by Ted Lyngmo on the question strongly suggests that he had cast a close vote; I'm not a moderator so I can't confirm this, but the timeline shows that the post was submitted to the Close Vote review queue (but that it was invalidated – not sure how or why). Further, IIRC, posts that have had close votes cast on them (whether or not they were ultimately closed) should not be selected as "known good" audits.
In summary, all I would say is: Please keep up your good work in the review queues and don't be (too) disheartened by occasionally failing bad audits.