I can't discuss safety privledged data, but I will say a few things. Since my last guess on this mishap, I've seen the report.
First off, the guy was in the process of tightening down a positive G break-turn. In that situation, a pilot doesn't pull on a darn thing except the control stick. If he has a hand that isn't on the throttle or stick, it's on the upper canopy handles or rail pushing away so he can get his head and torso twisted around to look backwards, not pulling on anything.
Under 6 or more G's, 40 lbs of weight on the head is NOTHING. You just probably wouldn't notice that. When turning your head as you put a good breakturn, a good tug on your personal gear could easily be mistaken as the G loading.
Shxt happens, and the board went over every possibility, everything that could have caused that ejection. There was some evidence that led them to their conclusion. I obviously can't go into board deliberation in this forum.
In a defensive breakturn, a lot of things happen quickly and it's by necessity an aggresive and violent maneuver. I think I blew out my L5-S1 disc at the F-15E RTU, and we were flying the heavier E models and not even the lighter Cs. So imagine someone resisting and moving around under enough force to blow out the lowest disc in their back, and noticing an additional 40 lbs. It's just not that much force when you consider your upper torso, harness, helmet, and other equipment weighs upwards of 900 lbs at that point in a 7+ G breakturn.
In the absence of any other data or "proof", I think the board came up with the most likely scenario and I'm inclined to believe them. We're warned from day one to keep our crap secured in the cockpit so this sort of thing doesn't happen, and there has been more than one T-37 student who flew home sitting on his hands with his handgrips raised because he did something that caused his gear to get tangled up in his seat handgrips. It's a good thing that the T-37 seats used a dual-action mechanism, otherwise there would have been a whole bunch of inadvertant student "immaculate" ejections over the last couple of decades.