Gov. Greg Gianforte on Monday appointed Eric Strauss, who currently serves as the state Department of Corrections’ deputy director, to lead the agency. The announcement comes two months after President Donald Trump appointed the agency’s current director, Brian Gootkin, to become the U.S. Marshal for the District of Montana. Strauss will assume his new role Jan. 6.
The department manages the state’s roughly 3,400 incarcerated individuals across a combination of public and private facilities, including a 1,500-person prison for men in Deer Lodge and a 250-person facility for women in Billings. The agency also oversees about 10,500 individuals under state supervision, either on probation or parole.
The agency is currently in the process of expanding its correctional capacity while about 600 inmates serve time out of state and even more remain in jails. Corrections broke ground on a prison expansion in Deer Lodge in April. The 2025 Legislature also allocated more funding for increased correctional capacity in the coming years.
Strauss hails from northeastern Montana and currently lives in Clancy with his wife and two children, according to a press release from the governor’s office. He has been deputy director at the corrections department since 2024, and before that worked at the state Department of Labor and Industry, and prior to that worked at St. Peter’s Health in Helena.
He is a graduate of the University of Montana with an undergraduate and a master’s degree, both in communications.
Neither Corrections nor the governor’s office responded to questions about Strauss’s new salary. Gootkin was paid about $160,100 annually, according to a state database.
LATEST STORIES
Congressional Democrats warn Interior Dept. wildfire plan lacks details
With wildfires already raging across country, consolidated wildland fire service critics ask what problems it would solve.
A Froid mechanic was charged with illegal reentry. Here’s what that means.
The federal government charged Roberto Orozco-Ramirez, a Froid mechanic, with illegal reentry into the U.S., a felony. As the story has played out, we found ourselves wanting to know more about the illegal reentry charge. What exactly does it mean, how common is it, and what does it have to do with deportation? And what might it mean for Orozco-Ramirez and his family if he is convicted in the coming months? Montana Free Press spoke with seven criminal defense and immigration lawyers to find out.
Avalanche forecasters warn of ‘considerable’ slide risks after late-winter storm
After minimal snowfall across Montana most of the winter, the arrival of a heavy storm this week has led avalanche forecasters to warn recreators about “considerable” slide risks across several mountain ranges.

