A. In National event, in a competitive auction, I bid 4♠. LHO passed and RHO bid "Stop, 5♥". The auction concluded LHO "6♣", RHO "7♥". All pass. I called the tournament director. LHO angrily asked "Why are you calling the director? You're accusing me of cheating." I said "No". When the director arrived, LHO told him "My opponent called me a cheat". I said "No" but the director reprimanded me for accusing opponents of cheating and left without hearing or addressing my attempts to raise concerns about the auction.
B. At my 1st Brighton speedball. I called the director when attention was drawn to an opponent's infraction. LHO complained to the director "It's cheating to call the director in a speedball." RHO just kept repeating "Cheat". The director mildly castigated her. "You mustn't accuse him of cheating". LHO advised RHO "You're right, Partner, but if you keep that up, you'll put yourself as much in the wrong as he is". The director defended my director-call but left without resolving any issues. LHO continued her "Cheat" mantra, at increased volume, until the next board.
My experiences reinforce Max Bevin's maxim "whoever shouts loudest wins the ruling"
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C. In a notorious ACBL case, a world-class player exchanged cards in opponent's hands after getting a bad result on a board. When the victims complained to him, he told them that they had not been damaged. The offender didn't report his infraction to the director but the victims did. Directors wouldn't give a ruling. Instead, they suggested that the victims complete a "Player Memo". The victims complied. A long time later the ACBL banned the offending player from play over the Christmas fortnight. It awarded his victims no redress. Many American professionals backed the offender and defended his actions.
Bobby Wolff (formerly WBF and ACBL president) writes that the ACBL concealed information on hundreds of American cheats including Internationals (e.g. B J Becker and Dorothy Hayden).
IMO, its ludicrous to expect an NBO to envistigate top-level cheating by its own members. It is understandable that NBOs condone cheats, especially as the suspects include board-members and internationals; the latter chosen by domestic sponsors and selectors. They might have to forfeit placings and titles -- including many world-championships. Even in ordinary rulings between national teams, Bridge Winner comments divide on patriotic lines.
The WBF has consistently procrastinated, prevaricated, and suppressed evidence (e.g. the Burgay Tapes). Most top American players believe that Europeans are cheats, especially the Italian Blue Team.
Recently, Nick Hammond and the CAT committee have accused more than 30 top players of on-line cheating The list includes World-champions and Tournament directors.
Naturally, officials are reluctant to take on the arduous and thankless task of cleaning out the Augean Stables. Especially as the accused are likely to sue them.
The probity of Bridge is suspect and its future precarious. Prospects are bleak unless there is a radical change of direction.
IMO reform must come from the top.
The WBF must urgently appoint a team and define a protocol to investigate and prosecute suspected top-level cheats in a co-ordinated, fair, open, timely, legally bullet-proof, and efficient way.