QUOTE(DavidT @ Oct 23 2007, 10:25 AM)

Don't simply make messages disappear due to SCBL hits....make sure they get put someone that a human can review them.
I completely agree with this. However, that statement could be enforced by rejecting the message during transmission (not accept and bounce) where the sender becomes the human to review. At least the sender knows it did not get delivered. If it is redirected to some internal queue, there is no guarantee that anybody ever sees that message again.
I've seen it in several different business settings. A person is assigned to a task (monitor the queue). The first week (month, year, whatever) that person does their job but never sees anything of value (or even occaisionaly does) and then other duties are added to this person and they either do not have time or plan to do it less. Maybe that person is replaced, but this specific job function is not passed on. Suddenly the message queue has not been checked in months or years, problably because someone got angry at not getting a reply while others have simply walked away.
The SpamCop SCBL is aggressive, you seem to understand that some legit messages will be bounced. If you understand your processes, you should be able to make the decision how to handle the "marked" messages.