Only AMCAS knows so they are and thus are the only ones who could do anything. They seem to be completely ok with the whole situation.
@gyngyn -- ???? You said you have two acceptees with multiple acceptances. AMCAS is not the only party that could do anything; your school could rescind their acceptances if they refuse to release their other acceptances!
On July 1st, how does this help anyone (other than those two candidates), and just why is it so important that those two might possibly be in your next class, that your school indulges them and accepts the definite last-minute disruption (either to itself or to a peer school, as well as to the candidates inevitably pulled in from a WL or as another school's CTE) as opposed to forcing a decision one way or the other sometime after 4/30 and before 7/1?
Is the answer that it's only two, so it's no big deal? Maybe next year's acceptees will read this and the 2 will become 10 or 20. At what point, if any, is it an issue, or is it never a problem because you know you could always fill your class, even if it means dozens of people disrupting their lives at the last minute, or possibly creating vacancies at other schools, also at the last minute, which also isn't a problem, because they could also fill their classes, and so on?
Again, why do the schools tolerate it just because AMCAS has stepped aside? I guess what I really just don't get is why, if med school admissions are such a seller's market, why do you tolerate this versus just setting a deadline and rescinding an acceptance if a candidate holds more than one after a certain date, with limited exceptions, for a limited period of time, when warranted?