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ICE Arrest of Iowa’s Schools Chief Stuns Community, Raises Questions About Oversight

Superintendent Ian Roberts, hailed as a unifying leader, now faces deportation after federal agents say he remained in the U.S. illegally despite a removal order. 

The arrest of Ian Roberts, superintendent of Iowa’s largest school district, has rattled Des Moines and ignited questions about how a man with deep public ties and an Olympic past ended up in the crosshairs of U.S. immigration enforcement.

Federal agents stopped Roberts in his district-issued vehicle Friday, accusing him of defying a final removal order from 2024.

According to Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the 54-year-old educator fled into the woods before being detained with the help of Iowa State Patrol. In his possession, ICE said, were a loaded handgun, $3,000 in cash, and a hunting knife.

Roberts, born in Guyana and raised in Brooklyn, had built a reputation as a dynamic school leader since taking the helm of Des Moines Public Schools in 2023. He oversaw a district of 30,000 students, earned a $270,000 salary, and held an active state administrator’s license.

Teachers’ unions called him “a beacon of light” for a diverse student body.

Yet ICE officials painted a very different picture: a man they labeled an “illegal alien” who slipped through hiring safeguards despite lacking work authorization and carrying a prior weapons violation. “How this individual was hired without work authorization … is beyond comprehension and should alarm the parents of that school district,” said regional ICE official Sam Olson.

District leaders countered that Roberts cleared background checks and filed the required I-9 paperwork. They said they had no knowledge of his immigration status or the removal order. “We’ve seen nothing to suggest that he’s not a citizen,” district spokesman Phil Roeder told reporters, adding that news of the arrest came as a shock.

Roberts’ personal history only deepens the drama. He arrived in the U.S. on a student visa in 1999, later represented Guyana in the Olympics, and climbed the ranks of school leadership in Pennsylvania before coming to Iowa. His lone criminal case — a 2022 hunting infraction in Pennsylvania — ended with a $100 fine.

Roberts suggested at the time that his race may have influenced the citation.

Friday’s arrest marked the second ICE action in Iowa in as many days, following a forceful detention at an Iowa City grocery store that sparked outrage. By evening, protesters had gathered outside federal buildings in both cities, denouncing what they called heavy-handed tactics.

For now, Roberts sits in a Woodbury County jail, his future uncertain. His fall from celebrated superintendent to federal detainee underscores a collision between immigration law, local governance, and community trust — one that Iowa parents and students are now left to navigate in real time.

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