Those guy are lazy when it comes to posting what images they're referring to.
The
"Clip not in shade" photo clearly shows the BRASS clip protruding from the magazine. It was in the rifle when Day picked the rifle up from the floor and it gradually was slipping out of the rifle as Day handled the rifle. The FACT that the various photos show the clip sliding out of the magazine is solid prof that the clip was NOT jammed or stuck in the rifle. The rifle was never in the proper orientation ( Magazine toward the floor) to allow the clip to fall out. This simple FACT tells us that the rifle was not fired that day. Because the clip is free to fall out of the rifle when the LAST cartridge is stripped from the clip by the forward motion of the bolt. Day and Fritz said that Fritz puled the bolt to the rear and a live round dropped out of the rifle....He did NOT push the bolt forward which is necessary to strip the last round from the clip. This means that the clip was free to fall out at the time Day picked the rifle up from the floor. The clip was simply "floating" in the magazine in a manner it would have been if a person had placed the clip in the magazine through the ejection port on the bottom of the magazine.
If the live round had been in the clip and the forward motion of the bolt had stripped the live round from that clip the clip would have dropped out of the magazine through the ejection port. The fact that the clip was in the magazine is a very strong indication that someone stuck that clip in the port and twisted it so that it wouldn't drop out easily..
What's more All of the witnesses who watched as Fritz pulled the bolt BACKWARD said that the live round fell out onto the floor at his feet. This is a clear indication that the live cartridge had not been tripped from the clip and the cartridge was not married to the face of the bolt. If that live round had been married to the face of the bolt the live cartridge would have been FLUNG out of the rifle by the ejector, when Fritz retracted the bolt. This means that the live round was simply placed into the barrel and the bolt closed ( but not latched with the bolt knob down)
All of the above indicates that the carcano was merely a "throw down" gun and it had not been fired that day.