Photo Source: Moorhead Police Department
Earlier this month, a student at Horizon Middle School in Moorhead alerted school officials that a 13-year-old male student was in possession of a large bag of blue pills at the school. Authorities located the bag, seized the pills and arrested the 13-year-old student.
Preliminary field testing of the pills indicated they contained fentanyl, an extremely dangerous controlled substance, linked to hundreds of thousands of fatal overdoses across the country in recent years.
The bag contained an estimated 1,500 pills described as counterfeit M-30 pills, designed to appear as prescription Oxycodone, and commonly sold on the black market. The danger is that the counterfeit pills contain deadly fentanyl, leading many unsuspecting people who use them to overdose.
Authorities estimated the street value of the pills to exceed $35,000. A seizure of this magnitude involving a middle school student is highly unusual. It is inconceivable that a distributor entrusted a 13-year-old with that quantity and value of drugs. The situation more likely involves the student taking the bag from an adult in their lives, thinking they could sell some of the pills at school.
Nonetheless, the situation represents the significant public safety threat facing our young people in 2025. Moorhead Police Chief Chris Helmick, who’s own children go to Horizon Middle School, aptly described the event as a “wake up call.”
A review of the Moorhead Police Department Annual Report for 2024 shows this seizure equates to about one quarter of the fentanyl pills seized by the Moorhead Police Department in all of 2024.

Chart Source: Moorhead Police Annual Report, 2024.
Unfortunately, the drug seizure is just one of several public safety incidents that have occurred so far this school year. In September, two different students associated with the Alternative Learning Center located within the Career Academy were arrested for possessing firearms, and a report of a social media driven threat of violence was investigated involving a student from Horizon Middle School. That threat was later determined to be false, but it has added to the overall concern.
As a result of these incidents, the police department has partnered with the school district to conduct K-9 searches in the future as a deterrent against bringing anything illicit to school.
Given the age of the suspect arrested for the fentanyl possession, no further information is available about the prosecution of that individual. However, it is expected that if an adult suspect is identified and prosecuted, the authorities will report those updates.
American Experiment has contacted the Moorhead Police Department, the Clay County Attorney’s Office, and the Moorhead Area Public School District and will follow up on updates as appropriate.
Of note, the fentanyl seizure came just days before the Trump administration designated the drug as a weapon of mass destruction on December 15th. The designation unleashes the full power of the Justice Department, Homeland Security, and the War Department to fight the trafficking of fentanyl into and throughout the United States.









