One of the JI occupants of the San Francisco home which was trashed during the summer has spoken of his shock at seeing his name posted on the internet by his former landlord.

Cormac Noonan, who stayed at the Sunset District house during the summer, says landlord Ritu Vohra failed to contact him before allowing a film crew to video a document with his name and date of birth on it.

“She just found my name and decided to put it on the news,” said the recent graduate of Management Science & Information Systems Studies from Trinity College Dublin. “That’s the defamation of my name without even checking.”

Mr Noonan returned from his summer in San Francisco on August, 24th. He said his name was not on the lease and that the number of students staying in the house varied throughout the summer. He added that all the students living in the residence have offered to fully reimburse the cost of repairs.

Irish construction companies in San Francisco have offered to repair the damaged house.

Earlier, the Irish consul-general in San Francisco Philip Grant said “reputational damage” had been done to Irish students in the city, and the wider Irish community was anxious to make amends.

“These cases are always damaging in a city where it is difficult to find accommodation at the best of times. This is an isolated incident. It is not typical of the J1 students, but stories like this don’t help,” he said.

Mr Grant described the response of the Irish community in San Francisco as “amazing. Not just from the Irish in San Francisco, but also the other J1 students from Ireland who were there during the summer. We have had people offer to help pay for the costs of the damage and they’ve also offered to help track down those who were responsible.”

Mr Grant said the consulate had been in touch with the Irish and American agencies who run the J1 programme to ensure those responsible for the damage accepted their responsibilities and paid for it.

The house in the Sunset District was owned by Indian landlord Ritu Vohra who took it back into her possession on Friday.

She discovered chandeliers ripped from the ceilings, broken doors, smashed windows and punched holes in the walls.

All the students left without informing her of the destruction.

She estimated that the damage would run into tens of thousands of dollars.

The damage featured on local CBS network evening news.

Some of the students have contacted Ms Vohru to apologise for what happened and had offered to pay their share of the costs.

They told her the damage was done by outsiders who were invited back to a party at the house.

Minister for Foreign Affairs Charlie Flanagan said the Irish J1 students responsible for vandalising their accommodation in San Francisco were “letting themselves down, letting their families down, and letting Ireland down”.

Speaking on RTÉ radio, Mr Flanagan argued the conduct was +”not reflective of the very good behaviour of the tens of thousands of young Irish people who go abroad on J1 visas every year”.

“I think sometimes young people when they’re abroad feel they’re not subject to the same strictures as if they were at home,” he said. “This behaviour does show a clear lack of respect.”

“I think there’s an element of parental responsibility here that they need to be advised when going abroad, particularly younger teenage students.”

The house in San Francisco had been rented by seven J1 students from different Irish third level institutions, though between 14 and 15 people reportedly lived there at various stages during the summer.

Ms Vohra had rented the same house to Irish students last summer and had no difficulties with them.

Some 8,000 Irish students travel to the United States on J1 visas every year. A quarter of them go to the West Coast, most to San Diego.