Second attempt:

Greetings, I've been using spamassassin 2.55 for a while now on Mandrake 9.2.

I have a list of URL's that are grouped to form a pretty big meta tag, and this 
has worked great for years now.  Recently, one
dirtbag message has found a way through the defenses and I can't figure out 
where it's breaking.  The interesting thing is that if I
forward this message to myself it works fine, and uses my custom body checks.

I have verified that womenhavebeen.com *IS* in my body_checks list (in my 
local.cf), but it seems that spamassassin just ignores the
body_checks on the original message.

Does anyone have any clue as to why this is happening?

Many thanks in advance,

Original message
====================================================
<original message removed as it got flagged as spam!>
====================================================

Original message spamassassin headers:
====================================================
X-Spam-Status: No, hits=0.1 required=3.0
        tests=HTML_MESSAGE
        version=2.55
X-Spam-Level: 
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 2.55 (1.174.2.19-2003-05-19-exp)
====================================================

And when I forward the message to myself, I get the following headers:
====================================================
X-Spam-Status: Yes, hits=75.1 required=3.0
        tests=FORGED_MUA_OUTLOOK,MISSING_OUTLOOK_NAME,
              rays_body_checks
        version=2.55
X-Spam-Level: 
X-Spam-Checker-Version: SpamAssassin 2.55 (1.174.2.19-2003-05-19-exp)
====================================================


-=Ray
------------------------------------------------
Ray Anderson
System Development Manager
916.788.2444 (Office)
916.798.9439 (Mobile)
PRIDE Industries
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.prideindustries.com
------------------------------------------------
One of the secrets of air fighting was to see the other man first. Seeing 
airplanes from great distances was a question of
experience and training, of knowing where to look and what to look for. 
Experienced pilots always saw more than the newcomers,
because the latter were more concerned with flying than fighting....The novice 
had little idea of the situation, because his brain
was bewildered by the shock and ferocity of the fight.
Air Vice-Marshal J.E. "Johnnie" Johnson, RAF

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