General Sally Yates finally testified in the U.S. Senate on Monday about concerns she relayed to White House legal counsel shortly after the January inauguration, that then-National Security Advisor Michael Flynn had lied about his conversations with a Russian diplomat and had, therefore, opened himself up to compromise and blackmail. We cover some of her Congressional testimony today, which was still ongoing at airtime. In the meantime, voters who might wish to respond at the voting booth to concerns about the Trump Administration continue to face new obstacles placed in their way by new Republican restrictions on voting. Another example comes out of Iowa, where, on Friday, the Governor signed a bill to require Photo IDs at the polling place, despite having no evidence that such a restriction would have prevented any voter fraud in the Hawkeye State. But even voters who are able to cast a vote continue to have legitimate questions as to whether their votes are counted accurately. That's certainly the case in states like Georgia, which still forces voters to vote on 100 percent unverifiable touch-screen systems. On today's BradCast, Garland Favorito, co-founder of the non-partisan election integrity organization VoterGA, joins us to discuss his group's new preliminary analysis, published late last week, of the computer tabulation disaster that occurred on Election Night in Fulton County during last month's U.S. House Special Election primary in Georgia's 6th Congressional District. Favorito, a long time IT professional, explains the disturbing analysis finding a number of previously unknown 'critical security flaws' revealed by the tabulation failure. He says the flaws in the GEMS computer tabulation system (used across the state, but also used in hundreds of counties in other states as well, even on paper ballot optical-scan systems) could allow results to be corrupted or manipulated in a way that would be virtually impossible for election officials, much less the public, to detect. In hopes of avoiding another disaster, VoterGA is calling on voters to request absentee paper ballots for the much anticipated June 20th runoff election between Democratic candidate Jon Ossoff and his Republican opponent Karen Handel, the state's former Sec. of State, in what has already broken the record for the most money ever spent in a single U.S. House election...