
Tom McGinty
Investigative Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
Wall Street Journal Reporter. Sorry for punctuating. Got an anonymous tip? https://t.co/t2ZL6a4hVg
Articles
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5 days ago |
magzter.com | Jared Diamond |Tom McGinty
Try GOLD - Free The Wall Street Journal | June 23, 2025 Brock Ungricht, the University of San Diego's head baseball coach, has spent virtually his entire adult life around the college game. So it's fair to say that he's intimately familiar with the ping that an aluminum bat makes when it connects with a ball. College baseball players are hitting the ball at elite speeds. This story is from the June 23, 2025 edition of The Wall Street Journal.
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6 days ago |
wsj.com | Jared Diamond |Tom McGinty
Brock Ungricht, the University of San Diego’s head baseball coach, has spent virtually his entire adult life around the college game. So it’s fair to say that he’s intimately familiar with the ping that an aluminum bat makes when it connects with a ball. But not even Ungricht was prepared for what he heard from the dugout last month.
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Mar 26, 2025 |
wsj.com | Christopher Weaver |Anna Mathews |Tom McGinty |Andrew Mollica
How the Journal analyzed Medicaid dataThe Journal identified duplicative Medicaid payments to insurers companies using a national database of Medicaid services and payments called T-MSIS. For recipients enrolled in Medicaid managed-care plans, the Journal identified all monthly premium payments to their insurers based on a criteria used by the federal agency overseeing Medicaid.
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Dec 29, 2024 |
wsj.com | Tom McGinty
Your browser does not support the audio tag. 00:00 / 01:49This article is in your queue. Like most doctors, Nicholas Jones prefers to diagnose patients after examining them. When he worked for UnitedHealth UNH -0.23%decrease; red down pointing triangle Group, though, the company frequently prepared him a checklist of potential diagnoses before he ever laid eyes on them.
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Dec 2, 2024 |
wsj.com | Mark Maremont |Christopher Weaver |Tom McGinty
Your browser does not support the audio tag. 00:00 / 00:00This article is in your queue. Bruce Kitt is one of the Medicare Advantage industry’s most lucrative customers. The federal government pays his private Medicare Advantage insurer thousands of dollars a year to cover the cost of doctor visits, hospitalizations and other medical care that the 74-year-old retired aircraft mechanic might need.
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RT @BenFoldy: an exclusive follow-up to my stories with @mcgint last year about failed bank execs selling shares ahead of the crisis. htt…

My mother (right) and her sister, Easter Sunday 1954 in Utica, NY. #DavesCarIDService https://t.co/Hsk1mFhe2O

RT @rebeccaballhaus: This is a must-read story out today from @cdweaver @mcgint @annawmathews @MarkMaremont. Among the disturbing findings…