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Sep 29, 2025  |  
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Stephen Dinan


NextImg:Why it was easy for an illegal immigrant to land top job in Des Moines’ public schools

The arrest of an illegal immigrant serving as superintendent of Des Moines’ schools has exposed a broader problem in America’s public education system: Few of them are using E-Verify, the federal government’s tool to weed out people not authorized to work.

Iowa has now revoked the education license of Ian Andre Roberts, the Guyanese immigrant who was helming the state’s largest school system despite his defiance of a deportation order issued more than a year ago.

U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement arrested Mr. Roberts Friday, moving to enforce a final deportation order an immigration judge had issued in 2024. Authorities say Mr. Roberts fled in his Des Moines-issued vehicle, then abandoned it and ran on foot, before being tracked down.



When officers later searched his vehicle, they found a handgun, which, as an illegal immigrant, is against the law to possess.

ICE said the case should be a “wake-up call” to communities to do a better job of checking who they’re hiring.

“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,” said Sam Olson, director of the ICE deportation field office that covers Des Moines.

Local school officials said they did check Mr. Roberts’ documentation using the paper-based process known as the I-9 form, and said he had claimed to be authorized to work when he was hired in 2023.

But experts said if they had used E-Verify, they could have blocked him, and avoided the embarrassing black eye they’ve suffered.

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“Every school district in the United States should be using E-Verify, if simply to protect the children they are responsible for,” said Rosemary Jenks, policy director at the Immigration Accountability Project.

There are more than 10,000 school districts in the U.S., but only a few hundred of them are listed as users of E-Verify in the program’s database, run by U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services.

A few of those districts are in Iowa, including Storm Lake and the Ballard Community School District. But Des Moines is not among them.

In the Washington metropolitan region, school systems in Fairfax County and Arlington County are listed as users.

“It doesn’t make sense not to use every available tool to ensure that the people you are bringing into a school don’t have a history that would potentially raise security concerns,” Ms. Jenks said.

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E-Verify is voluntary at the federal level, though some states make it mandatory for employers within their borders. A bill to add Iowa to that list cleared the state Senate last year but did not make it through final passage.

Des Moines schools didn’t respond to an inquiry for this story, but Phil Roeder, a spokesman, told The Associated Press last week it had seen “nothing that would suggest that he’s not a citizen.”

He said the system relied on a third party to do a background check, and said they were not aware of the 2024 deportation order, which came after his hiring in the summer of 2023.

Des Moines schools have more than 30,000 students and 5,000 employees.

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The school system suspended Mr. Roberts from his job, and then his credentials were stripped by the state Board of Educational Examiners, which said as an illegal immigrant, Mr. Roberts is not authorized to work and so he cannot hold a license and cannot serve as superintendent.

Des Moines school officials expressed sorrow at Mr. Roberts’ situation.

“Two things can be true at the same time – Dr. Roberts was an effective and well-respected leader and there are serious questions related to his citizenship and ability to legally perform his duties as superintendent,” said Jackie Norris, chair of the school board.

ICE said Mr. Roberts was in the U.S. on a student visa in 1999 and was ordered deported in 2024. The agency didn’t respond to an inquiry from The Washington Times on his status during the intervening years, though Mr. Olson’s statement made clear he was not in legal work status by 2023.

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His history seems to suggest decades of enrollment at schools for much of those intervening years. That included his bachelor’s degree at Coppin State University, a first master’s degree at St. John’s University in New York City and another master’s at Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business. He has also listed programs at Harvard University, Morgan State University and work toward another master’s degree in business administration at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

At some point, he also obtained a doctorate in education with a focus on urban educational leadership from Trident University, an online for-profit school.

With a student visa and temporary work authorization, he could have obtained a driver’s license and a Social Security card, which could have been enough to fool the weak identity requirements of the I-9 paper form.

“If you are here in a temporary status where you get those and you overstay, there’s nothing to render those documents no longer valid,” said Matthew O’Brien, deputy executive director at the Federation for American Immigration Reform.

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He said E-Verify is a good system but it depends on the government keeping up the data in the system.

Mr. Roberts worked as a principal in Baltimore and at Anacostia High School in Washington — neither listed as a user of E-Verify — and as a senior administrator in St. Louis and Oakland, California.

Mr. Roberts pled guilty to a firearms citation in Pennsylvania in 2021. He was charged with having a loaded weapon displayed in his vehicle on state hunting lands.

In a statement in 2022, Mr. Roberts questioned why he was stopped.

He said he was a legally licensed firearms owner and knew his way around guns, saying he was a “trained commissioned military officer.” He did not say which military.

He said he knew the law prohibited him from entering his vehicle with a loaded gun while on Pennsylvania game lands, and he said he did not.

“I do not know the true intent of the officer who chose to randomly stop me while I was on my way out of the woods heading to my vehicle,” he said in the statement, posted to social media by the Millcreek Township schools in Pennsylvania, where he worked at the time.

National teachers’ union officials didn’t respond to inquiries for this story, but local school union leaders in Iowa took to social media to complain about ICE’s arrest.

“It is a dark, unsettling time in our country,” said Joshua Brown, president of the Iowa State Education Association. “This incident has created tremendous fear for DMPS students, families and staff.”

Mr. O’Brien said it was shocking that Mr. Roberts made it through so many school background checks, given some of the red flags in his background.

“Nobody was watching the storefront here at all. Nobody engaged in anything resembling an appropriate level of vetting,” Mr. O’Brien said.

He suggested the schools didn’t want to look too deeply at Mr. Roberts, perhaps because of his immigration history.

“It was shocking to me, but I can’t say it was surprising,” Mr. O’Brien said.

News reports also said someone with Mr. Roberts’ personal details is registered to vote in Maryland. Noncitizens, whether here legally or illegally, are not supposed to be allowed to vote in national elections.

• Stephen Dinan can be reached at sdinan@washingtontimes.com.