Within one 24-hour period last month, two gun accidents involving Californians echoed briefly through the news.
On March 6, Lana Meisner, wife of former Eagles bassist Randy Meisner, unintentionally shot and killed herself when she jostled a rifle stored in a closet in her Los Angeles residence. The following morning, the sound of a gunshot in a Sacramento home led a mother to discover her 2-year-old daughter bleeding on the floor.
One bullet found an adult; the other a child. One bullet came from a rifle; the other from a handgun. One was reported across the nation; the other was mainly a local concern. One led to a death, the other to a toddler in the hospital.
Despite such different circumstances, the news coverage of these two incidents had one thing in common: a sense of mystery. Police sources, according to the Daily Mail, considered Meisner's death "a freak accident." The Sacramento Bee said detectives were "trying to determine how the toddler gained access to the gun and who owned it." Guns are designed to do exactly one thing, but we remain shocked when they do it. Their capacity to do what they were made to do is a reliable source of surprise.
Indeed, the word most often used to describe the conditions that lead to such mishaps is nearly always the same: "somehow." In just the last few weeks, anyone scrolling through social media feeds could have read it repeated like a mantra in a litany of stray bullets and bad luck.
In Utah, a man in charge of setting up targets on a shooting range "somehow" received a bullet intended for a bull's-eye. In Florida, a gun rights advocate was driving with her son when she heard a bang and felt a pain in her back. "The small child was sitting in the vehicle's back seat, right behind his mother," one news item said, "and somehow got his hands on her handgun." In Michigan, an 11-year-old boy was killed when "somehow he got a hold of a gun and started playing with it." And in Kentucky, the shooting of another boy was described as if there had been no shooter involved: "While there at a gathering with several other kids and adults, police say the 8-year-old was somehow shot."
The list of this year's "somehow" shootings could go on and on. We are, it seems, in the midst of a "somehow" epidemic — and we have been for a long time.
Since the earliest days of the colonial press, widely published newspaper accounts often known as "Melancholy Accidents" recorded the consequences of mistakes, misfires and mishandled weapons in gruesome detail.