SHOCK: ICE Arrests Superintendent of Des Moines, Iowa, Public Schools – An Illegal Alien Fugitive From Guyana with Prior Weapons Arrest
ICE agents on Friday arrested the Superintendent of Des Moines, Iowa, Public Schools – an illegal alien from Guyana with a prior weapons arrest.
According to Fox News, Dr. Ian Andre Roberts was an active ICE fugitive with a deportation order since May 2024. As soon as ICE agents identified themselves, Roberts fled in his car and sped off. He then abandoned his car and fled on foot. Federal agents found him hiding in shrubbery and took him into custody.
Agents found a loaded handgun and a fixed-blade hunting knife in Roberts’ vehicle.
A senior ICE official tells @FoxNews that today, ICE arrested the Superintendent of Des Moines, Iowa Public Schools, Dr. Ian Andre Roberts, who ICE says is an illegal alien from Guyana and active ICE fugitive with a deportation order since May 2024. Fox is told Dr. Roberts fled from ICE agents in his car once they ID’d themselves as immigration agents, speeding away, then abandoning the car. He was found in a brushy area 200 yards away with the help of an Iowa State Police K9. Per ICE official, agents found a loaded gun, a “fixed blade hunting knife”, and $3,000 cash in Dr. Robert’s vehicle.
Per senior ICE official, Roberts first entered the U.S. in 1999 on a F-1 student visa at St. John’s University was ordered removed from the United States on May 22, 2024, with proceedings being held in absentia. On April 24, 2025, an Immigration Judge in Dallas, TX denied a Motion to Reopen his immigration case.
Fox is told Dr. Roberts also has a weapons arrest in 2020, though the disposition of that charge/case is currently unclear.
Dr. Ian Roberts, the Des Moines Public Schools superintendent arrested by ICE, was earning an annual salary of $265,000. He began his tenure on July 1, 2023, and was placed on administrative leave following his arrest in September 2025.
ICE arrests criminal alien serving as Des Moines Public Schools Superintendent; prior weapons charges and in possession of loaded handgun at time of arrest
“ICE Des Moines today arrested Ian Andre Roberts, a criminal illegal alien from Guyana in possession of a loaded handgun, $3,000 in cash and a fixed blade hunting knife. At the time of his arrest Roberts was working as the Superintendent of Des Moines Public Schools despite being an illegal alien with a final order of removal and no work authorization.
During a targeted enforcement operation on Sept. 26, 2025, officers approached Roberts in his vehicle after identifying himself, but he sped away. Officers later discovered his vehicle abandoned near a wooded area. State Patrol assisted in locating the subject and he was taken into ICE custody.
Roberts has existing weapon possession charges from February 5, 2020. Roberts entered the United States in 1999 on a student visa and was given a final order of removal by an immigration judge in May of 2024.
The investigation into how Roberts acquired the handgun is being turned over to the ATF. It is a violation of federal law for those in the U.S. without legal status to possess a firearm and ammunition.
“This suspect was arrested in possession of a loaded weapon in a vehicle provided by Des Moines Public Schools after fleeing federal law enforcement,” said ICE ERO St. Paul Field Office Director Sam Olson. “This should be a wake-up call for our communities to the great work that our officers are doing every day to remove public safety threats. How this illegal alien was hired without work authorization, a final order of removal, and a prior weapons charge is beyond comprehension and should alarm the parents of that school district.
Even More Damning Revelations Emerge About Illegal Alien Former Des Moines Superintendent
Fresh details from the Department of Homeland Security paint a troubling picture of Ian Andre Roberts, the former superintendent of Des Moines Public Schools arrested by ICE last week. Roberts, an illegal alien from Guyana, now faces federal charges for possessing firearms unlawfully, on top of a criminal record stretching back decades that includes drug trafficking and weapons offenses.
Authorities discovered three guns during a search of his home, including a loaded 9mm pistol hidden under a living room seat cushion, a rifle in the master bedroom closet, and a shotgun behind the headboard. Another handgun turned up in the vehicle he used while trying to escape ICE agents.
Roberts’ criminal past includes a 1996 arrest in New York for criminal possession of narcotics with intent to sell, criminal possession of narcotics, criminal possession of a forgery instrument, and possession of a forged instrument. Those charges point to early involvement in drug dealing and forgery, activities that should have raised red flags long before he climbed the ranks in public education.
By 2020, he faced more serious accusations in New York: second-degree criminal possession of a weapon for having a loaded firearm outside his home or business, third-degree criminal possession of a weapon involving an ammunition feeding device, and fourth-degree weapon charges. Two years later, in 2022, Pennsylvania convicted him of unlawful possession of a loaded firearm. Even a 2012 conviction in Maryland for reckless driving, unsafe operation, and speeding adds to the pattern of disregard for the law.
Beyond the crimes, a sealed restraining order from Jackson County, Missouri, was served on Roberts in August 2023 by the Polk County Sheriff’s Office. The reasons remain unknown due to the seal, but its existence suggests personal conflicts serious enough to warrant court intervention. Investigators also uncovered that Roberts was illegally registered to vote as a Democrat in Maryland, which calls into question the safeguards in voter registration processes and how someone without legal status could enroll.
DHS officials have made clear their stance on how Roberts ended up in a position of authority over thousands of students. “Ian Andre Roberts, a criminal illegal alien with multiple weapons charges and a drug trafficking charge, should have never been able to work around children,” said Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin.
This declaration points directly to the failures in vetting that allowed Roberts to oversee Iowa’s largest school district. McLaughlin went further, noting the items found at his arrest: “When ICE officers arrested this Superintendent, he was in possession of an illegal handgun, a hunting knife, and nearly $3,000 in cash.”
Such possessions during a flight from authorities raise alarms about what risks he might have posed in a school environment, where safety is paramount. She added, “This criminal illegal alien is now in U.S. Marshals custody and facing charges for being an illegal alien in possession of a firearms. Under Secretary Noem, ICE will continue to arrest the worst of the worst and put the safety of America’s children FIRST.”
Roberts’ immigration story reveals repeated attempts to stay in the U.S. despite violations. He first arrived in 1994 at John F. Kennedy International Airport on a B-2 visitor visa for pleasure but returned illegally before his 1996 drug arrest. In 1999, he entered via San Francisco on an F-1 student visa, set to expire in 2004. Over the years, he applied for employment authorization three times—in 2000, 2018, and 2019—each granted for one year, with the last expiring in 2020. He filed four green card applications, all denied. U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services issued him a notice to appear in 2020, and on May 22, 2024, a Dallas immigration judge ordered his removal in absentia. His arrest on September 26, 2025, came after he sped away from ICE, abandoned his car, and hid in nearby brush, only to be tracked down with Iowa State Patrol assistance.
Questions about Roberts’ qualifications compound the scandal. On his LinkedIn profile, he claimed attendance at Morgan State University from 2003 to 2007, but the school confirmed he never earned a degree. He also listed himself as an “incoming MBA candidate” at MIT’s Sloan School of Management, yet the registrar’s office has no record of his enrollment in any program there. These fabrications likely helped him secure roles in public education across Baltimore, Washington, D.C., St. Louis, California, Pennsylvania, and Iowa.
During his tenure as superintendent of Pennsylvania’s Millcreek Township School District, Roberts faced lawsuits alleging sex discrimination. One male faculty member sued, claiming Roberts favored less qualified women for principal positions due to bias against men. Local reports indicate the district settled three such suits for over $400,000 while he was in charge. These legal battles reveal a troubled leadership style that prioritized personal agendas over fair practices.
In response to the revelations, Des Moines Public Schools has taken action against the executive search firm that recommended Roberts, filing a lawsuit over the flawed vetting process. Board chair Jackie Norris stated, “Ian Roberts should have never been presented as a finalist.” This move acknowledges the district’s oversight but also shifts some blame to the firm that failed to uncover his deceptions and criminal background.
The case of Ian Andre Roberts exposes deep flaws in how school districts hire leaders and enforce immigration rules. With his history of crimes, false credentials, and illegal status, his rise to superintendent serves as a stark warning about the need for rigorous background checks to safeguard students and communities.