I believe the user may be appending "/edit/" to the end of the URL to allow them to edit the already edited questions.
While yes, this is possible, it is unnecessary. Edit reviewers already have the power to immediately reject edits right from the suggested edit review GUI and immediately apply their own edit.
So there is no need to actually hack the URL as you described to bring up the edit window. And even if it did, because reviewers have the power to do reject and edit, hacking the URL really isn't even abuse of the system. In fact, it is actually better for you to have a edit conflict rejection instead of a straight rejection because edit conflicts do not count against you when calculating the edit ban (for having too many rejected edits).
The system is designed to prefer edits from users with full edit privileges (>2K rep) over suggested edits, so this type of rejection is always going to happen unless the design of the edit system is significantly changed.
What is more likely to have happened is the user simply encountered the post at roughly the same time as you. Both posts you are referring too were less than 30 minutes old at that point, so it is very easy for users hunting for posts to edit to stumble across them, possibly from other review queues (such as the First Posts, or Help and Improvement queues).