updated 5:04 PM EDT, Sun October 13, 2013
(CNN) -- "MasterChef" runner-up Joshua Marks was in
"the battle of his life fighting mental illness" when he killed himself
Friday, his family said Sunday.
His family blames the lack of mental health treatment facilities and the easy access to guns as factors in his tragic death.
"It is overwhelming to
think that with proper, intensive treatment, Joshua may still be with
us," his lawyer, Lisa Butler, said Sunday. "He was a jewel with so much
talent to offer this world. But, in his state of mind, he turned to the
streets for a gun and easily got it."
Marks, 26, died from a
gunshot wound to his head. His death has been ruled a suicide, a
spokesman for the Cook County, Illinois, medical examiner said Sunday.
He was charged with
aggravated battery in July after scuffling with police officers who were
called to the scene after he suffered serious facial wounds from a
self-inflicted gunshot, according to his lawyer.
His mother believed that
incident was a call for help, not a suicide attempt, Butler said. But
getting Marks help was not easy because of the lack of full-time mental
health facilities in Illinois that would accept his insurance, she said.
Marks' mother, Paulette
Mitchell, found him dead in an alley on Chicago's south side Friday
evening after a neighbor called to say he was walking around with a gun,
Butler said.
His family is now hoping
to help others suffering from mental illness by talking about what
happened to Marks in the three months since his arrest, she said.
'The battle of his life'
Marks -- who, at 7 feet 2
inches tall, was known by friends as a "gentle giant" -- was diagnosed
with bipolar disorder a year ago, the same month he lost to to winner
Christine Ha in the final round of the Fox reality cooking competition's
third season. A doctor diagnosed Marks with schizophrenia just last
week, Butler said.
"Joshua was so kind, so
gentle," his mother told CNN Sunday. "He loved life. He loved people. He
would never hurt anyone; never. He was just a gentle, sweet soul; but
he hurt himself. That breaks my heart, that he hurt himself."
"But, behind that huge
smile, Josh was in the battle of his life fighting mental illness," a
family statement said. "It was extremely tough, but Josh was always
positive, focused on his faith in God and determined to win; pushing
forward through his illness to follow his passion for cooking and dream
of being a renowned chef."
That battle apparently
began just as Marks was achieving celebrity status on television. "I
hadn't noticed any signs of anything wrong or any mental illness until
after Josh completed filming 'MasterChef,'" his mother said. "The time
he was away filming was extremely stressful on him."
Marks' stepfather Gabriel Mitchell, in a statement to CNN, described "the toll that being on a reality show puts on people."
"Josh had a following of
fans and was put on a 'celebrity' type pedestal, with the expectation
from others that there was money and fame; but, his personal reality was
that he was struggling mentally and financially," he said. "I think
people expect that you come away from a reality show and have it made.
That's not necessarily the case."
Marks spoke about his mental illness in a public service video he recorded in February for the Make a Sound Project, a nonprofit suicide awareness project.
The project promotes
"how to use music as an alternative to the crazy thoughts you may have
going in your mind," Marks said in the video. "Me, personally, I have
bipolar disorder, so, you know, I'll get a little anxious sometimes. And
how I cool out is, I listen to music and just listen to the words and
just relax and, you know, find my melody. I wish we had some music going
on in here right now."
'A mental break'
But last summer Marks
suffered "a mental break" that led to his arrest on July 29, his lawyer
said. Marks told police he had been possessed by "MasterChef" judge
Gordon Ramsay, who turned him into God, the Chicago Tribune reported.
"What people don't know
is that on the night Josh was arrested in July, he had just shot himself
and had called police for help from the emergency phone," his mother
said. "He wasn't himself, he was in a manic state, calling the police to
help him after having shot himself."
When police arrived, a scuffle ensued.
"They said that Josh
lunged at them and attempted to disarm an officer," his other said. "In
addition to his gunshot wound to the face, Josh suffered a fractured jaw
and injury to his face and head."
He was treated at a
hospital for the facial and ear wounds caused by a bullet that he fired
and then transferred to the Cook County Jail, where he was placed in the
general population, his lawyer said. He got no mental health treatment
and no medications while in jail, Butler said.
"I think people look at
mental illness as if it is a crime instead of treating the illness,"
Gabriel Mitchell said. "They knew of his mental illness, yet they throw
him in jail with no treatment?"
His mother, a Chicago
public elementary school teacher, bailed him out after more than a week.
She desperately sought a full-time mental health program for Marks, but
she could not find a one with an available bed, Butler said.
"After this, Josh was determined to get well," his mother said.
Mitchell "continually
ran into roadblocks" as she put her focus into finding help for her son,
Butler said. "Access to long-term, in-patient mental health care is
extremely limited. How can you appropriately treat your loved one's
mental health challenges if access to necessary care is virtually
non-existent?"
She "felt as if her
hands were tied" but "she was doing everything she could to get him in
treatment," Butler said. Mitchell enrolled her son in an outpatient
program that was "the best available through insurance," she said.
A new diagnosis: Schizophrenia
That program concluded
Thursday, with a doctor informing Marks that he believed he was
suffering from schizophrenia. The new diagnosis upset him, Butler said.
"That's not what I am, that's not what I am," he told his mother, the lawyer said.
"He was very distraught
by this new diagnosis," his mother said. "He was just coming to terms
with having been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, but he just couldn't
handle this new diagnosis."
Mitchell stayed home
from her teaching job Friday to be with her son. "I was concerned about
him; he just wasn't himself, so I stayed with him at my dad's home
Thursday night after we left the hospital and all day on Friday," she
said. "I only left for a couple of hours to pick up my daughter from
school Friday afternoon."
She was stuck in
Chicago's rush-hour traffic when she got a call from her brother saying
that a neighbor saw her son walking around an alley with a gun.
"I rushed back to the
south side to get to the neighborhood, and just started driving through
the alleys near my dad's house looking for him," Mitchell said. "All I
could think was I have to get to him in time."
She frantically drove through alleys searching.
"I saw Joshua laying
there in the second alley that I turned down," his mother said. "I
screamed for help and held him. I just didn't get to my boy on time. I
didn't get to my boy."
Mitchell is determined
to set up a foundation in her son's memory to help people with mental
illness to address the same issues as Marks. "I am not done, this is not
over," she said. "I am going to make sure that Josh's voice and dream
live on by fighting for mental healthcare treatment."
While police work to trace how Marks got the handgun he used to kill himself, his family is also seeking answers.
"We live in a country
where anyone can buy a gun on the streets at will," Butler said. "We
know that Josh paid little or no money for that gun, because he just
didn't have it; he was unemployed and in treatment full time. So with no
money, how did he get this gun?"
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