TFLB L72A said:
TFLB L72B said:
- A player must not infringe a law intentionally, even if there is a prescribed rectification he is willing to accept.
- There is no obligation to draw attention to an infraction of law committed by one's own side (but see Law 20F for a mistaken explanation and see Laws 62A and 79A2).
- A player may not attempt to conceal an infraction, as by committing a second revoke, concealing a card involved in a revoke or mixing the cards prematurely.
As soon as you're aware that your side has committed an infraction, you must draw attention to it.
Then, for example, the revoke law could be less draconian. IMO, it is the revoker, who usually first becomes aware of his revoke. Opponents and partner sometimes fail to notice until he points it out. Hence a possible revoke law change might be:
If your side is the first to draw attention to your revoke, then the director attempts to restore equity (giving the benefit of doubt to your opponents): but after the revoke becomes established (i.e. your side plays to a subsequent trick) if your opponents are the first to draw attention to the possibility of your revoke, then the director awards the revoke trick and all subsequent tricks to your opponents on that board.
Such a law might encourage players to confess to their revokes; and to take care not to rescue impossible contracts by accidentally revoking