As with voting on any post, the question is always, "Is this post useful." While lots of other people feel that just reproducing readily available information is useful, I certainly don't, and I cast my votes accordingly.
We expect people asking people asking questions here to be doing their research, which is going to include looking up the documentation for the topics related to their question. This means that there's really only two reasons to be quoting the documentation in an answer, either it's not obvious why the topic you're quoting is related to the question (and so you wouldn't expect people to have looked their before asking), or it's not obvious why the quote answers the question asked. Both cases would involve additional explanation. In the first case, you'd need to explain why the topic you're quoting is actually relevant to the situation, because it's non-obvious, in the second, you'd need to explain why the quoted information actually answers the question (or you may need to explain both). If these explanations aren't an important part of the answer then it's a pretty strong sign that the entire answer is not in fact a useful addition, and also that the question was simply poorly researched, as it's answered in entirety by readily accessible information, making it not a useful question.
While there's no problems with plagiarism if the answers clearly state that they have reproduced the docs
This is false. Plagiarism can take multiple forms. One of those forms is using another's content without indicating the original author(s). Another form is reproducing the works of others without adding your own original contributions. Answers citing others' information are expected to use that information to augment their own original content. If they don't, it's plagiarism. Flag accordingly.
By the way SO once created an entire section of the site that existed for the primary purpose of plagiarizing the documentation for various topics. It was called "Documentation". It ended up needing to be shut down because it was not only not useful, but actively harmful. It turns out that asking questions about information not already covered in a language's documentation is helpful, but just regurgitating it isn't.
so easily have been found in documentation
--> not always easy to find the correct documentation and then to search inside that documentation (ex: stackoverflow.com/a/53577522/8620333 I spend a lot search for that part and I didn't find it and the answer is mostly a copy/past from the documentation)