Just to clarify ... you are using Gmail's web interface, right?  So that
you are bringing your web browser to Gmail's webmail page in order to
manage your messages, and not using a separate email client or browser
program, or a mobile device, right?

I'm pretty sure the only way a message can "move" back into Spam without
someone actually moving it there, is if a new message arrives that is
detected as spam.

That new message might be a reply to the first one, so that it becomes part
of the same Conversation with it, and if the reply was detected as spam, it
will *seem* as if the original message is back in Spam.  (It isn't, but the
new reply is.)  It might help reveal this by turning Conversation mode OFF.

Or, that new message might be a duplicate of the first one.  If it too is
detected as spam, Gmail might mark (again) the conversation as spam, while
also deleting the duplicate message so you never see it.

Messages from websites are more likely to have something improper in their
headers, causing them to be detected as spam.

Regards,
Andy

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