Sen. J.D.

Vance's (R-OH) attempts to justify past comments linking rising crime waves to Irish immigrants raised eyebrows from film buffs who said he used the wrong Martin Scorsese movie to defend himself. Donald Trump's running mate addressed questions about his 2021 comment on immigration and crime during a campaign address to the Milwaukee Police Association in Wisconsin on Friday. "Has anybody seen the movie 'Gangs of New York?'" Vance said in response.

"That is what I'm talking about; we know that when you have these ethnic enclaves in our country, it can lead to higher crime rates." Vance was attempting to contextualize a recently resurfaced Skype interview in which he made a similar claim. "You had this massive wave of Italian, Irish and German immigration, and that had its problems, its consequence," Vance said during the interview.

"You had higher crime rates, you had these ethnic enclaves, you had inter-ethnic conflict in the country where you really hadn't had that before." ALSO READ: 'Disqualifies himself': Veterans blast Trump for 'disrespectful' remarks about war heroes Washington Post analyst Philip Bump took issue with Vance's characterization of the 2002 film starring Daniel Day Lewis as the notorious anti-Irish gang leader William Poole, or Bill the Butcher. "The irony here being that the most brutal, vicious killer in that movie is the nativist who loathes immigrants," Bump replied .

"Poole was a thug, a thief and a celebrity, leader of a Christopher Street.