Edited Jack Doyle (May 23, 2014 07:36:38 AM)
Originally posted by Erik Kan:If you're concerned about a malignant third party, it should be fairly easy to identify if that's the case. Between deck reg and deck build there was a deck swap - it should be possible to identify who was involved in the deck swap. You should also easily be able to identify who was sitting near the original deck reg (and could have taken it). That's about 5 or 6 people at most I would guess.
In the case that this all happened because of a malignant third party,
their cheating would still be impossibly difficult to identify.
Originally posted by MTR 3.4:DLI is correct, policy does not support issuing a proxy for lost cards - no matter who lost them (which can't be determined in this scenario).
A proxy card is used during competition to represent an Authorized Game Card that has been accidentally damaged or excessively worn in the current tournament (including damaged or misprinted Limited product) as determined solely by the Head Judge.
Originally posted by Scott Marshall:MTR 3.4DLI is correct, policy does not support issuing a proxy for lost cards - no matter who lost them (which can't be determined in this scenario).
A proxy card is used during competition to represent an Authorized Game Card that has been accidentally damaged or excessively worn in the current tournament (including damaged or misprinted Limited product) as determined solely by the Head Judge.
I would not issue a proxy. I understand and can relate to those who would prefer that option, but I'm bound by policy.
Originally posted by Brian Brown:(All academic anyway, but…) There would have to be collusion between the registrant and the receiver, and the potential for gain (at least, gain greater than that of other, easier and safer collusion) is minor. But the risk is much greater. You can claim you're short a foil Tarmogoyf, but you wouldn't get a foil Tarmogoyf anyway. At best, you'd get a basic land with “TARMOGOYF” penned onto it. And you're probably the subject of an investigation.
issuing proxies for missing cards could open the doors to “hard-to-detect” cheating such as deck list manipulation and claims of missing cards that weren't really missing.
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