Well, the fact that they shared what they are doing (on purpose or not) made them fall from the horse because, unfortunately, that behaviour happens all around:

- users that know each other personally;
- users that know each other from SO; (as long as the question/answer isn't completely off - same for the above point)
- users that don't like someone upvote the competition and downvote their targets;
- users that answer and downvote all other answers on the post;
- etc, etc;

That's a common practice. Not long ago someone I know was on StackOverflow and I was behind him, we were both checking the answers to a question we had interest in, and when he saw one from JonSkeet he said, "_this guy is king!_" and upvoted. There was an accepted answer that wasn't Skeet's, but Skeet's got his upvote just for being Skeet's.

Such behaviours are practically impossible to detect but once detected, what you did is the right thing, because as a pattern behaviour, it can be identified and "_taken care of_".