In the early 2000s, Danny Guy co-founded Salida Capital, a Canadian hedge fund with an appetite for risk. Under Guy’s control, Salida poured capital into uranium.
By 2006, Salida’s Global Energy Fund placed bets on mines in Kazakhstan, Canada, and the American West. The fund specialized in “special situations,” industry code for volatile plays where the right situation, timed right, could be worth millions.
In 2009, Russia’s state nuclear agency, Rosatom, began acquiring a Canadian company called Uranium One. It started small—17%—then kept buying. By 2010, Rosatom wanted control. The prize wasn’t just uranium. It was access: to Kazakh deposits, American mines, and strategic reserves buried beneath a 35,000-acre ranch in Wyoming.
The deal needed approval from CFIUS, a powerful U.S. committee tasked with blocking foreign threats to national security. On the panel sat the State Department, then led by Secretary Hillary Clinton.
That spring, as the uranium deal quietly advanced toward Washington, Salida’s charitable arm—the Salida Capital Foundation—received $3.3 million. It was an anonymous donation.
Within days, the Salida Foundation wired $780,220 to the Clinton Foundation. It was announced as a pledge to support farming projects in Malawi. Anchor farms. Fertilizer. Local development.
But the timing was curious. Nearly 90% of Salida’s charitable giving that year flowed into that single donation—at the exact moment CFIUS was reviewing the Rosatom acquisition.
From Toronto to Moscow: How Danny Guy Became Putin’s Uranium Middleman.

While Uranium One executives lobbied American diplomats to protect their licenses in Kazakhstan, Danny Guy’s hedge fund funded Clinton-linked initiatives.
By October 2010, CFIUS, led by Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, gave its approval. Russia’s Rosatom now controlled a company with access to roughly 20% of America’s uranium production capacity.
Uranium from Wyoming was quietly shipped to Canada for processing. From there, it was sent to Europe. Assurances made to Congress were broken. Uranium One was delisted. Fully absorbed by Rosatom.
And then, in a 2011 Rosatom corporate filing, a line surfaced:
“Salida Capital Corp. – wholly owned subsidiary.”
Danny Guy’s firm—buried in a Russian state document. If it was the same Salida, a hedge fund built on uranium speculation, had become part of Rosatom’s global structure.
In 2012, Bill Clinton publicly praised Salida, thanking the firm for its role in Malawi. He didn’t mention the anonymous windfall. He didn’t mention uranium.
Between 2010 and 2012, Salida Capital gave $2.6 million to the Clinton Foundation.
In that same window, Bill Clinton was paid $500,000 for a Moscow speech sponsored by Renaissance Capital, a bank promoting Uranium One stock.
Back in Canada, Salida’s trading desks were bleeding. The Salida Strategic Growth Fund collapsed. Another fund—Dacha Strategic Metals—resisted a takeover attempt by Guy. In a letter to shareholders, they called Salida’s record “devastating”—citing one-, three-, and five-year losses.
Guy had failed his investors.
But he had moved uranium.
When Salida shuttered, no questions were asked. No hearings. No subpoenas. Guy quietly reemerged at FBSciences, an agricultural startup.
By then, the uranium was gone.
The ranch in Gillette, Wyoming, belonged to Moscow.
Anonymous $3.3 Million to Danny Guy. Then the Clintons Got Paid.

The Clinton Foundation had pocketed millions.
In 2017, as the Uranium One controversy reignited in Washington, congressional investigators requested records. Salida’s name appeared on the list. They wanted to know more about the $3.3 million, the timed donations, the Russian subsidiary.
No hearings. No charges. No questions answered. The uranium was gone to Russia. The mines had changed hands.
Investors lost millions. Danny Guy vanished for a time and ermerged in Bermuda.
Danny Guy made himself and the Clintons a little richer, and with 20 percent of America’s uranium in Putin’s control, Guy made America and Cananda less safe while making the dictator Putin stronger. He controlled more of the nuclear assets of the world.
Uranium
In one world, it lights cities. In another, it levels them. Refined the right way, uranium powers homes. Refined a little more, it becomes a bomb. That’s why men guard it. Why governments count it. Why deals around it happen in whispers and traitors trade it.
It doesn’t move in trucks. It moves in wires to the Clintons. In donations made to Salida then laundered back to the Clintons. In names like Salida buried deep in Russian filings. And when it changes hands— it can change everything.
Just ask Danny Guy.
Frank Parlato is an investigative journalist, media strategist, publisher, and legal consultant.






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Uranium is not just a resource. It’s strategic infrastructure. It powers nuclear energy, fuels submarines, and, when enriched, forms the core of weapons that can wipe entire cities off the map. There’s no substitute. No backup. And once it’s sold off—it doesn’t come back.
In 2012, Rosatom, Russia’s state-owned nuclear agency, acquired control of 20% of U.S. uranium production capacity through its acquisition of Uranium One, a Canadian mining firm with licenses in Wyoming and other U.S. states. The deal was quietly approved by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States (CFIUS), where then–Secretary of State Hillary Clinton held a key seat.
That same year, Salida Capital, a Canadian hedge fund, received a $3.3 million anonymous donation. Shortly after, Salida’s foundation donated $2.65 million to the Clinton Foundation—over 90% of its total giving that year. Rosatom would later list Salida Capital as a subsidiary in its corporate filings.
The Uranium One deal was approved. Rosatom walked away with American uranium. There was no investigation. No reversal. It was done.
The question is, who moved the money?
Was it “friends”? Political filings use the term as a shield—nebulous enough to be legally acceptable, too vague to trace. Was it a church? Religious organizations in the U.S. don’t have to disclose detailed financials or donor lists. They can accept foreign funds without scrutiny. Was it a dry cleaning company? Investigators use the phrase as shorthand for money laundering—small businesses that take in cash, clean it, and move it on. Or was it something else entirely?
What about a cult?
Funny how uranium doesn’t need a truck to disappear—just a wire transfer, a handshake, and a press blackout.
Salida collapses. Investors lose millions. A ranch in Wyoming belongs to Moscow. And the only thing louder than the silence is the speech in Moscow that got Clinton half a million.
Danny Guy didn’t vanish. He was absorbed—like the uranium.
No headlines. No hearings. No outrage. Just a quiet exit through the Bermuda Triangle.
We’re told this was nothing.
But uranium never lies.
It just waits………..
Interesting story. You suggest a cospiracy, a quid pro quo: a substantial donation to the Clinton Foundation in return for an uranium permit from CFIUS. It may be the truth, it may be not. You need receipts to back this story.
Danny Guy is just another ambitious entrepeneur. Now that Putin and Trump have become buddies, maybe some uranium can be returned to America. A “great deal” could be around the corner! And with a superbonus: he can blame the Clintons!
Information from China Daily
Updated: 2010-06-12
I DON’T GIVE A FUCK ABOUT DANNY GUY!!!!!
I WANT FOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOODDDDDDDDDDDDDDDDD!!
FRANK, YOU FUCKING WOP COCKSUCKER!! GET THE FUCK ON THE NEXT BARCA BACK TO YOUR SHITHOLE ISLAND OF SICILIAN TRASH!!!!!
FRANK PARLATO IS A FUCKING GUINEA, GREASY, SLEEZY SICILIAN FUCKING ASSHAT.
On the prior Danny guy article I opined he is likely a weasel and it seems I was right except for previously I didn’t realize he was a Russian weasel and also a Clinton weasel. I wish the Clinton’s would go to jail but fat chance of that. Bills health isn’t great so he’s probably not long for this earth and Hillary is well just too fat for jail those cells won’t accommodate such a big boned woman
All theater. Nuclear weapons are obviously fake. Made up to scare us and keep the evildoers in power. Heavy metals do not explode – they can react to create energy (like batteries) – hence nuclear power, which is real (and why meltdowns occur and not explosions). Expose this and then maybe you can start to get to the root of our problems. Wake up McFlys!