Flags are the appropriate way to report inappropriate content. "Spam, inappropriate, or offensive" flags in chat are shown for handling to all users in chat with > 10k reputation. Those flags are often resolved without the intervention of moderators. "Flag for moderator" flags are seen only by moderators. Assuming that the initial set of "spam, inappropriate, or offensive" flags resulted in the message being deleted as "spam, inappropriate, or offensive", then the bot would end up suspended from chat for 30 minutes. That's the system's automated response to a chat message being deleted as "spam, inappropriate, or offensive". *Depending on what was actually happening*, and assuming that a moderator's attention was called in to the issue, then the response is likely to be more significant. What, in total, to do would be a judgement call made by the moderator. Moderators, usually, aren't idiots. We do make mistakes from time to time, but we wouldn't be fooled by a bot which was created with, or being used with, the intent to avoid the requirement that discussions in chat must comply with the [Code of Conduct](https://stackoverflow.com/conduct). The bot you're thinking of may not have been created with that intent, but it would certainly be looked at to see if it was being used that way. However, the bot I'm thinking of which does what you describe was created with the explicit intent of allowing users to avoid suspensions resulting from the handling of their chat messages which violated the Code of Conduct. So, if a moderator is involved, then the actual user who made the comment would likely be the one affected by disciplinary action, because we'd be looking at what actually happened and who was responsible for the posted content. However, because the messages were forwarded by the bot, we may not be able to be sufficiently sure [note: "sufficiently sure", not "prove"] that the user which the bot claimed said what was posted was actually the user responsible for the statement. So, applying any penalty to the presumed author would be a judgement call made by the moderator, which would be based on the totality of the situation. However, the bot account and the user who owns the bot are *also* responsible for *everything* the bot posts. In all likelihood, the bot account would be suspended and deleted, as it would be an alternate account which was used to post "spam, inappropriate, or offensive" content. Our *normal* response to alternate accounts which are used to violate the rules is to suspend the alternate account for 365 days and delete/destroy that alternate account. The user or users who own and/or control the bot would at least be warned, if not suspended and barred from using alternate accounts (e.g. bot accounts) for a period of time equivalent to the suspension applied to the bot account. The moderator who responds to the situation may choose that the actual situation doesn't warrant the above response, but it is what is *normally* done for alternate accounts which are used to violate the rules, including violating the Code of Conduct.