First, before I say anything else, please don't start a witch hunt based on this query. We know people all too often like to blindly flag things based on a query, so please don't do that or otherwise go after these users.

As to why apparent serial voting hasn't been reversed by the system, the serial voting script has been designed to be conservative and to minimize collateral damage from innocent voting activity. This occasionally lets targeted voting through. Also, commonly people trying to defraud the voting system try to serially vote between accounts, get it reversed, try again with a smaller number or more staggered across time, and repeat until the votes stick.

For several cases like this, we will catch the voting patterns later and remove sock puppet accounts or get votes manually invalidated. That will show up much later in the reputation history and might be hard to associate to a particular period of serial voting. Looking through your list, I see a couple of those. I also see a bunch of completely innocent folks who just happen to be highly active in certain tags.

Let me comment on how we generally handle suspected voting fraud. First, we tend to only step in for the most obvious or most troublesome cases. Every single case of this has to be inspected by a moderator, and we have to be absolutely certain that there's a problem before we act on it. Unless someone's really lazy and is doing things like giving their sock puppet the exact same name as their main account (which happens quite frequently), it takes effort to investigate a single account.

Moderators cannot invalidate votes, and the most we can do ourselves is to delete clear sock puppet accounts. For the rest, we have to manually notify SE employees and provide a clear case to invalidate votes between accounts. They then have to look into it even deeper to see if we were right. That means that apparent coordinated voting between accounts of people who work together, but where the accounts are each legitimately operated by a different person, can take a while to deal with. Glancing at your list, many of the ones I see there fall into this category.

Unfortunately, this kind of coordinated voting is prevalent in users from certain cultures, for reasons that [Tim explores in this article][1]. Also, it can be hard to tell where to draw the line between the natural impulse to vote for people you know and when this becomes excessive. This means that sometimes we knowingly allow targeted voting to pass, because it just hasn't crossed the threshold where we feel we need to get SE employees to intervene.

Making targeted vote invalidation available to moderators so that we could deal with this more easily [might seem like a way to combat this][2], but handing a group of non-employee users the ability to change votes [leaves open the potential for us to abuse this or otherwise reduce trust in the voting system][3].

So that's a fairly long-winded explanation of why moderators haven't dealt with every single person in this query. Some are innocent, some have been handled already, a few we missed, and some aren't yet at the stage where we feel the need to intervene. Again, please don't turn this into a witch hunt based on a simple query.


  [1]: http://alertfalse.com/2013/10/lessons-from-hofstede-part-1-power-distance/
  [2]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/143951/give-moderators-a-tool-to-invalidate-votes-between-users
  [3]: https://meta.stackexchange.com/a/144053/135615