Ian Roberts was sentenced to two years in prison and faces deportation to Guyana after his sentence [Washington Times][Iowa Public Radio]. These two facts are corroborated by both available sources. All other reported details rest on a single source. Claims that Roberts was sentenced for lying about citizenship, possessing guns, had been ordered deported prior to sentencing, served as superintendent of Des Moines public schools at arrest, fled an ICE vehicle stop in a school-issued vehicle, or possessed a loaded pistol appear only in Washington Times reporting and carry unverified status. Additional unverified assertions include statements attributed to Judge Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger, Roberts' status as a former Olympian for Guyana, his immigration history since entering as a student, periods without work authorization, prior employment in Maryland, District of Columbia, and Pennsylvania districts, and the circumstances of his hiring by Des Moines schools [Washington Times]. Source limitations restrict coverage to one right-leaning outlet and one unrated outlet. No left-leaning or additional centrist primary documents, such as court filings or district personnel records, appear in the reviewed material. Progressive analysis frames the case as an example of rigid immigration enforcement disrupting long-term public employees. Conservative analysis presents the outcome as necessary accountability for unlawful presence combined with public-sector employment obtained through misrepresentation. Libertarian analysis emphasizes administrative-rule violations and systemic vetting shortfalls rather than direct harm. Devil's Advocate analysis notes that all three framings rely on the same unverified sequence and overlook primary court records or hiring-process documentation. Blind spots include absence of information on whether the sentence derived from false-statement charges, firearm possession, or other factors, and lack of detail on effects within Des Moines schools after the arrest became public.