Des Moines Public Schools Superintendent Ian Roberts arrested by ICE on basically a 26 yr old charge

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Des Moines Public Schools Superintendent Ian Roberts arrested by ICE




Des Moines Public Schools Superintendent Ian Roberts was arrested by U.S. Immigration Customs Enforcement for allegedly being in the United States illegally, according to federal officials.

Tricia McLaughlin, a spokeswoman for the Department of Homeland Security, confirmed Roberts' Friday, Sept. 26, arrest and detention and said a court had issued a "final order of removal" in May 2024 for the deportation of the Guyana native and longtime U.S. resident.

She said Roberts abandoned his car and fled from police on Friday, and was allegedly in possession of a loaded handgun, a large amount of cash and a hunting knife. He was arrested in what DHS described as a "targeted enforcement operation."

At a 3 p.m. news conference, School Board Chair Jackie Norris said the district was still working to learn more about what happened.

"We do not have all the facts. There is much we do not know," she said. "However, what we do know is Dr. Roberts has been an integral part of our school community since he joined two years ago."

She said earlier in the day that Associate Superintendent Matt Smith will serve as interim superintendent until further notice. Smith previously served as interim superintendent during the 2022-23 school year.

In a statement Friday evening, the district said it "has not been formally notified by ICE about this matter, nor have we been able to talk with Dr. Roberts since his detention."

Roberts, 54, has served as Des Moines Public Schools superintendent since July 2023.

DHS says Superintendent Roberts lacked work authorization; DMPS knew about a 2021 hunting rifle citation​

In an emailed statement, DHS called Roberts a "criminal illegal alien."

Roberts allegedly sped away when officers approached his vehicle and identified themselves, and officers found his vehicle abandoned in a nearby wooded area. Inside was the handgun, $3,000 in cash and the hunting knife, the department said.

Roberts' official DMPS bio says "he enjoys hunting."

In response to the reports of the loaded gun reportedly found in Roberts' vehicle, the district said Friday evening that its policy dictates that weapons are "prohibited on school grounds or at a school-sponsored or school-related activity."

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Who is Ian Roberts, the Iowa school superintendent accused by ICE of being in the US illegally?

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Des Moines Public Schools Superintendent Ian Roberts talks with students before the first day of school at Samuelson Elementary in Des Moines, Iowa, on August 23, 2023.

A year into his tenure as superintendent of Iowa’s largest school district, former Olympian Ian Roberts made headlines when – in a maroon three-piece suit, candy cane striped bow tie and matching Nike Air Force 1 sneakers – he ran a 100-meter dash against some of his elementary school students.

An 11-year-old crossed the finish line a few steps ahead of Roberts, who represented Guyana in the 800 meters in the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney, CNN affiliate KCCI reported.

It was a small but unforgettable lesson.
“I raced an Olympian,” fifth grader Amayah Vilmael, a student athlete whose parents are from Nigeria and Haiti, said after the May 2024 race, according to KCCI. “I’m going to keep that in my mind forever.”

Roberts said, “The work we do is so much more than reading, writing and math.”

On Friday, the popular superintendent of Des Moines Public Schools again made headlines after he was detained by immigration officers, according to the Department of Homeland Security, which claims he’s in the country illegally and has weapon possession charges.

Roberts was then placed on paid administrative leave pending more information by the Des Moines Public School Board on Saturday after a vote determined he was unable to perform his duties.

“Yesterday came as a shock to all of us. I want to be clear today: We still do not have all of the facts,” Board Chair Jackie Norris said at the meeting.

For Roberts’ colleagues, the more than 30,000 students he oversaw and their parents, the episode offered another unforgettable lesson: A close-up look at the Trump administration’s unrelenting crackdown on immigration – which has seen raids on workplaces and arrests of community pillars such as a firefighter, a journalist and a pastor.

‘My career chose me’​

His arrest came one month into the school year, shook the community and spurred a protest outside the federal courthouse in Des Moines. “Education, not deportation / Free Dr. Roberts,” read a sign carried by a demonstrator, according to KCCI footage. Local education and immigration advocacy groups have rallied behind the superintendent.

Alfredo Parrish, an attorney in Des Moines, told CNN he spoke with Roberts – who was being held at a county jail in Sioux City, Iowa – by phone on Saturday morning.

“He sounded good. We had a good conversation,” said Parrish, whose firm is representing the superintendent. Parrish declined further comment, saying he needed “an opportunity to review all the documents” related to the case.

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Thousands gather outside the Neal Smith Federal Building in downtown Des Moines, Iowa, on Friday after Des Moines Public School superintendent Ian Roberts is detained by Immigration and Customs Enforcement earlier in the morning.

Roberts’ long career as an educator included positions in New York City; Baltimore; Washington, DC; St. Louis; Oakland, California; and Erie, Pennsylvania, according to his LinkedIn profile.

“My career chose me,” he said in an interview with Coppin State University “Alumni Stories.”

“I believe that I was divinely guided to this career, to educate, inspire, motivate and serve as a champion for children, particularly children who are marginalized by our K-12 education system, and to inspire the adults who serve them daily.”

He was named Des Moines Public Schools superintendent in 2023, according to the district’s website. Roberts was “born to immigrant parents from Guyana, and spent most of his formative years in Brooklyn,” New York, the website said.

His rise from special education teacher to principal to administrator resonated with many in a country where, in 2021, nearly one-fourth – or 11 million – of its public school students were children of immigrants, according to the Center for Immigration Studies.

“I just think it’s really important that we take care of one another, and we seem to be at a spot where that’s not what’s happening,” Mary Pat LaMair, a district teacher who was among the crowd protesting Roberts’ arrest on Friday told KCCI.

“It’s important for people to know that the general public, I think, is not OK with what’s happening,” she added.

First library card changed his life​

Last month, in announcing a partnership between Des Moines Public Schools and Des Moines Public Library that allowed the school IDs of middle and high school students to function as a library card, Roberts spoke about how his first library card changed his life.

“My mom couldn’t get me to leave the bedroom once I was able to borrow three, four or five books,” he told DMPS-TV, the school district’s television channel.

https://www.cnn.com/2025/06/13/business/ice-workplace-raids-home-depot
Roberts entered the US on a student visa in 1999, according to DHS.

He graduated with a bachelor’s degree from Coppin State University in Maryland, according to his bio on the district website. At Coppin, where he was inducted this year to the sports hall of fame, Roberts was the college’s first men’s NCAA all-American in any sport. He was also the school’s first Olympic athlete.

Roberts later got master’s degrees from St. John’s University in New York and Georgetown University in Washington, according to his bio on the district website. He is married and enjoys hunting.

Runners compete in heat four of the men's 800m round one qualifying heat at the Sydney Olympic Games on September 23, 2000. From left are South Africa's Johan Botha, Jamaica's Marvin Watts, Guyana's Ian Roberts and Zimbabwe's Crispen Mutakanyi.

The school district and DHS presented starkly divergent portraits of Roberts.

DHS described him as a “criminal alien” and suggested he was a public safety threat. But at a news conference after his arrest, board president of Des Moines Public Schools Jackie Norris said the superintendent was “an integral part of our school community” who “has shown up in ways big and small” for students and staff.

The Iowa Board of Educational Examiners issued Roberts a license to serve as superintendent in the state in July 2023, according to Norris.

On his application for the job, Roberts said he was a US citizen who was eligible to work in the district, Norris said at the board meeting Saturday.

Norris said the school district only recently learned of the final removal order for Roberts issued by a judge in 2024.

“We were not made aware of that fact, and that’s very concerning,” Norris said. “I want to be clear – no one here was aware of any citizenship or immigration issues that Dr. Roberts may have been facing.”

Roberts disclosed his weapon charge, related to a hunting rifle, when he was hired, a district spokesperson told CNN.

The superintendent was arrested as part of a “targeted enforcement operation” and fled after US Immigration and Customs Enforcement officers approached him, according to statements from DHS and the Iowa Department of Public Safety.

DHS said he was “in possession of a loaded handgun, $3,000 in cash and a fixed blade hunting knife” at the time of his arrest. It’s a violation of federal law to own a firearm and ammunition if an individual doesn’t have legal status in the US.

Another administrator, Matt Smith, has taken the role of interim superintendent in the meantime, according to a message posted on social media by the district earlier.

The board can revisit the decision to place Roberts on leave at anytime as they learn more details about his status, board member Kimberly Martorano said at Saturday’s meeting.

A longtime gun owner and hunter​

Des Moines Public Schools said it was unaware of the order of removal but Roberts did inform the school board of a firearms offense related to a hunting rifle during his hiring process. The district said in a statement Roberts “provided sufficient context and explanation of the situation to move forward in the hiring process.”

Public records show Roberts pleaded guilty to a weapon charge in Pennsylvania in 2022. CNN has been unable to verify whether Roberts has a separate charge from 2020, which DHS cited in its statement Friday.

In a 2022 Instagram post, Roberts wrote he was given a citation by a state game warden for having a loaded weapon in his vehicle. He said he is a longtime licensed gun owner and hunter. Roberts, who was in the woods hunting that day, said he placed his hunting rifle in the backseat of his vehicle to ensure the warden “did not feel unsafe or threatened in any way.”

“I may not appear to be the ‘type of man’ who would enjoy deer season in Pennsylvania, in fact, I am and have been hunting for more than 20 years,” Roberts wrote.

Roberts wrote he never intended to leave a loaded weapon in his vehicle but was approached by the warden before he had the chance to unload it and place it in a lockbox. He added he remains “confident in my decision not to unload a rifle in the presence of a law enforcement officer.”

The district said Roberts submitted an employment eligibility verification form and an I-9 as part of the hiring process.



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Somethings off about this, he would have to supply all documents (social security card or I-9 and other documents) prior to prior to signing the contract and starting the new job, not to mention pass background checks. So if his docs were bad it should have been caught.
 
He was targeted cause he wouldn't give I.C.E. access to arrest kids... :hmm:



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Thing is police/law enforcement will show up asking for records without warrants knowing they need one. And in terms of them wanting to arrest students he probably followed procedures & required them to show up with documents to support the arrest & when they didn't have those he told them to kick rocks which he should have.
 
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