Long Law Semantic argument shortened: "You want to be a Bridge Lawyer? Go Right Ahead. Of course, people who would rather win the game with the cards rather than the game of being Technically Correct (the best kind of correct) in the bar afterwards just CTFD and don't worry about 'who should'."
"When attention has been drawn to an irregularity, the director should be summoned." With one exception (which never happens IRL, for bridge values of "never"), I don't care who does it. You want a ruling, you call the Director. The opponents are being stroppy about something, you call the Director. People don't know what to do when the scoring machine keeps going to the score page, you call the Director.
If someone claims a BIT and the other side disputes it, attention has been drawn (I know, there's no irregularity yet, but we do have contested facts). Get the Director over.
The Law quote is:
16B2 said:
When a player considers that an opponent has made such information available and that damage could well result this player may announce, unless prohibited by the Regulating Authority (which may require that the Director be called), their intention to reserve the right to summon the Director later (the opponents should summon the Director immediately if they dispute the fact that unauthorized information might have been conveyed).
There is nothing in that Law that says it's solely the disputer's responsibility to call the Director, just that they should. Because the only way this dispute will be resolved, or at least put on notice, is if the Director is at the table. But especially if the nature of the information has not been clearly stated, double especially if the lovely legal "R" words have been used, it is not their sole responsibility, and I as the director eventually called will not penalize them for not - hmm, what have I said before about other statements from the opponents that use only the legal words, knowing they are not understood? - knowing exactly how the Law reads.
And as for "should" - "failure to do it is an infraction jeopardising the infractor’s rights..." And yeah, it might. It certainly will bias the eventual director call. But it doesn't *deny them* their rights, just put them in jeopardy - it will be harder to argue the dispute later.
If there is a dispute, somebody should call the Director. Sure the opponents should, but if they don't, if you want a clear path at least, you do. Or, you know, continue to argue about it (or whine about "we could call the director here and get your score taken away, but we'll be nice") until the next table calls the Director, or deal with "they disagreed with us initially, but they didn't call the director, so they must have been okay with our statement" being treated with the respect it deserves.
Frankly I wish the ACBL still took the "require the Director be called" path. Even if it never happened. Even if most of the time it did happen, there wasn't in fact any UI of note, and it really was just Yet Another Flight A Intimidation Tactic. But it certainly shut down *this* Flight A Intimidation Tactic.
I mean, if you really want to argue bridge Law semantics, since the opponents disputed the UI conveyance and didn't call the Director, an infraction has occurred; the Director "should" be summoned. If you don't, what about your rights? Or are you just going to not draw attention to it - in which case, need the Director help you?
Long live the Republic-k. -- Major General J. Golding Frederick (tSCoSI)