Here is an animated GIF of Day lifting the rifle up off the floor. These frames are taken from The Lost JFK Tapes DVD. They are some of the clearest images that I have seen. Sadly, the film sequence starts after Day already has the rifle up a significant distance from the floor. So, we do not get to see it laying flat like one of the other videos posted earlier in this thread appears to show.
As I stated earlier in this thread, I now believe that the bolt is not in the fully up position. This is apparent to me due to seeing these clearer images depicting the rifle in motion. Take a look at the distance between the bolt handle knob and the scope. I will try to get some other image to compare this distance with. Perhaps the video of the blabbermouth demonstrating an identical model of the rifle with an identical scope will help in this regard. Please feel free to voice your opinions. Thanks!
I posted this image earlier in the thread, it shows that the safety is not quite aligned with the slot it is supposed to fit in to meaning the bolt handle must be up in the "fully up" position.
The images of Day picking the rifle up in no way demonstrates the bolt handle is not fully up, if anything it's quite the reverse.
The bolt handle is clearly sticking up, there can be no doubt about that. That the safety is not aligned with its slot means the bolt handle is fully up and that the bolt is not fully forward.
If, after the last shot, the bolt is pushed forward in the usual quick and fluid fashion, the bolt would be fully forward so the bolt handle would have no problem latching downwards with the bolt handle fitting snugly against the body of the rifle.
The best explanation for the position of the bolt in the Alyea footage is that the bolt is jammed. What would cause this?
Walt's explanation, that the ejector has not properly engaged with the bullet and is jammed up against it, seems most plausible. This would account for the very small misalignment.
But what would cause the ejector not to engage with the bullet? Normal use?
Or manually inserting a single bullet into the chamber?