Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman can't point to a particular moment that convinced him in May that it was time to seek help for his alcoholism.
It was a series of things, he said: The long illness and death of his mother, DFL Party icon Jane Freeman; a tough re-election battle in 2018; ongoing consternation in the community over the fatal police shooting of Jamar Clark; the murder trial of former Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor.
"They were all huge stressors," Freeman said Thursday, in his first extensive interview since returning from a medical leave in June.
"You don't think this stuff can get to you. But guess what? It did."
Freeman admitted that sharing his struggles with alcohol was very difficult. "I'm a human and none of us like to admit our failures," he said.
He voluntarily sought outpatient treatment and benefited from it, he said, but will need to continue his recovery through active participation in Alcoholics Anonymous.
"Alcohol had no impact on the way I did my job," he said. "I never got into a situation where I was drinking in the morning or during the workday. I know I didn't make a decision while I was impaired."
Freeman isn't the only Minnesota elected official to deal with substance-abuse issues. Both former Gov. Mark Dayton, a Democrat, and former U.S. Rep. Jim Ramstad, a Republican, went public with their addictions.