lamford, on 2020-January-24, 09:37, said:
There is what is known as "the Beijing minute" (of the WBFLC), which, from memory only, restores equity to what it was after the first revoke, which includes the penalty for the first revoke. This was misapplied in the infamous Riccardi Revoke Ruling, I think in Poznan 2011, where the second revoke gained a trick and an eminent AC failed to overturn it causing Ton Kooiman to tear his hair out, or what hair he had left!
In this case the equity after the first revoke was 12 tricks, so that is what is applied.
Such a parsing does not accord with the law and implies that that the law is rewritten without approval of the Executive. But the law was not thus rewritten when it was amended in 2017 as it contains no such words (and being approved by the Executive).
In the current instance:
64C2a requires an adjusted score if more tricks were likely if some number of revokes had not occurred. This occurred here- upon the claim declarer is worth 8 tricks while absent a revoke it is likely he would take 10. Thus an adjusted score.
12C1b requires (b) The Director in awarding an assigned adjusted score should seek to recover as nearly as possible the probable outcome of the board had the infraction not occurred.
It is clear that declarer ought to take 10 tricks absent the revokes which thus is the proper adjusted score.
However, there is a strong case that had declarer drawn timely attention to the second revoke then (instead of an adjusted score) he ought to have been entitled to the score for dropping the Q under the ace whether or not E corrected that revoke.