Thats a pretty large claim with not much to back it
You can find cases where users were caught because they sent it to exchanges and the exchanges cooperated with law enforcement, or because they naively hopped to transparent chains like Bitcoin, etc, but not really anything that was directly attributed to Monero itself
P2P transactions that dont leave Moneros blockchain give you very strong privacy guarantees
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My monero tracing tool automatically identifies the sender of this transaction: c97d96fe61b2aee18a04fdb0975594c7e6d3334036e0e57e70666b9e5fe309b3
Try it here: https://supertestnet.github.io/examiner/
It seems to only be able to identify the sender in about 1 out of 15 transactions, but that's not nothing. I suspect tools with more data (like Ciphertrace's monero tracing tool, linked on my examinr github repo) do a better job of this, but it's silly to claim monero can't be traced in the face of two tools that at least sometimes trace it