Polygnome's answer is correct: you use a custom moderator flag on the affected post, with a link to the attempted edit.
That leaves the title question: why is there no way to flag an individual user? The answer is that Stack Overflow wants to focus on the content, not on the individual user.
Unfortunately, some trolls abuse this by making accounts that don't have posts. Trolls have created accounts that had no activity beyond just having a hateful name and/or avatar.
If an account has no activity at all, other than just having a trolling name and/or avator... you could try to flag one of your own posts to explain the situation.
(Since this is now a feature-request):
IF we implement this as a feature, it needs some restrictions. It's easy to imagine a new user, angry at a downvote or comment, flagging another user's profile out of spite.
As a few examples of restrictions:
- it should require a minimum of rep.
- and/or it should only be possible to flag new profiles
- and/or it should only be possible to flag profiles that don't have answers or questions.
With restrictions like that, we can use such a flag against troll accounts, without inviting too much abuse.
Warning! Profane language
because it isn't really NSFW somehow (For things like violent images or pornography, I would leave it being said "NSFW").