In 1995, one of Groër's former school students accused him of
sexual molestation. A number of others made similar charges shortly thereafter, as did some monks. Pope John Paul II promoted
Christoph Schönborn from auxiliary bishop to
Coadjutor Archbishop of Vienna on 13 April 1995 and later in the year accepted the resignation Groër had submitted as required on his 75th birthday in October 1994. Groër moved to the Roggendorf monastery, where he served as prior. When new allegations surfaced, Austrian Church officials appealed to the pope, who initiated an investigation in February 1998. In April, at the pope's request, Groër resigned as prior and withdrew from public life. He released a statement in which he asked for forgiveness but made no admission of guilt. The statement read: "In the past three years there have been many often incorrect statements concerning me. I ask God and the people for forgiveness if I have brought guilt upon myself." After surrendering his Church duties and duties as a Cardinal, Groër left Austria as part of a "self imposed exile" for several months and moved into a convent near Dresden, Germany. He continued to work as a confessor in women's monasteries, received visitors and said Mass. Suffering from cancer, his health declined rapidly. Austria's
statute of limitations prevented civil authorities from prosecuting Groër. In 2010, Cardinal Schönborn (elevated to that rank in 1998) said that Cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger had attempted to convince
Pope John Paul II to initiate the investigation Church officials are also alleged to have offered some of Groër's former pupils compensation in return for agreeing not to repeat their charges against him.
Hubertus Czernin, author of a book about the case, believes that Groër abused more than 2,000 young men. Groër continued to deny the allegations until his death. ==Death and eulogies==