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 An official inquiry at the University of Texas at Austin has rejected 
charges of scientific misconduct which a homosexual activist leveled 
against sociology professor Mark Regnerus after he published a study 
that found negative life outcomes among children of parents who had had 
same-sex relationships.
 Robert A. Peterson, the university’s research integrity officer, said 
he “carefully reviewed” all available data, materials and information 
and discussed the process with other inquiry panel members.
 “I have concluded that Professor Regnerus did not commit scientific 
misconduct,” he said in an Aug. 24 memorandum to university officials.
 Regnerus’ research drew on data from the New Family Structures Study 
which examined life outcomes of 3,000 Americans age 18 to 39.
 He found that households led by parents of either sex who engaged in 
same-sex relationships also showed greater household instability.
 There were “statistically significant” differences in 25 of 40 life 
outcomes between adult children who grew up with married, opposite-sex 
parents and those who grew up with a mother who had a same-sex 
relationship.
 Children from same-sex female households showed more physical and 
mental health problems, more instability in romantic relationships, and 
lower average income as adults. They also showed higher levels of 
unemployment, smoking, need for public assistance and involvement in 
crime.
 Activist and blogger Scott Rose had charged Regnerus with ethical 
violations in a June 21 letter to University of Texas President Bill 
Powers. University officials interviewed Rose about his charges.
 Peterson’s review found no justification for the charges.
 “None of the allegations of scientific misconduct put forth by Mr. Rose
 were substantiated either by physical data, written materials, or by 
information provided during the interviews,” he said. “Several of the 
allegations were expressly beyond the purview of the inquiry.
 He said that Rose believed Regnerus’ research to be “seriously flawed” 
and Rose “inferred that there must be scientific misconduct.”
 “However, there is no evidence to support that inference,” Peterson said.
 He added that any problems in Regnerus’ research and analysis should be left to academic debates and future research.
 David Hacker, senior counsel with the religious liberty group Alliance Defending Freedom, praised the inquiry’s outcome.
 “America’s universities should always serve as truth-seeking, free 
marketplaces of ideas,” he said Aug. 29. “Disagreeing with a study’s 
conclusions is not grounds for allegations of scientific misconduct; 
therefore, we are not surprised that those accusations were found to be 
baseless.”
 The inquiry involved significant time and effort. All data on Regnerus’
 computers, including e-mail and documents, were sequestered. The 
inquiry officials obtained his grant applications and correspondence. 
The university created a panel of senior faculty members to advise the 
inquiry process and the university retained an experienced independent 
consultant to monitor the inquiry.
 Inquiry officials interviewed both Regnerus and Rose. The interviews 
were recorded and transcribed by a court reporter, Peterson’s memo said.
 University provost and vice president Steven W. Leslie said in an Aug. 
28 memo that he accepted Peterson’s conclusion that there was no 
evidence of misconduct.
 “Consequently, this matter is closed,” Leslie said.
 Regnerus’ initial report on his findings drew swift reaction from 
homosexual advocates critical of his findings. The Human Rights Campaign
 and the Gay and Lesbian Alliance against Defamation criticized the 
researcher’s report.
 A group of 18 social scientists signed a statement in support of 
Regnerus in June. They said his research is “not without limitations” 
but they thought much of the criticism of him was “unwarranted.”
 In a June 12 interview with EWTN News, Regnerus said he began his project with “no idea what the data would reveal.”
 In his June announcement of the paper, the professor said his “most 
significant” finding “is arguably that children appear most apt to 
succeed well as adults when they spend their entire childhood with their
 married mother and father, and especially when the parents remain 
married to the present day.”
 
