Susan Sarandon suggested tonight that Pennsylvania could be plagued with the same problems as New York in Tuesday's primary and urged Bernie Sanders supporters to come prepared to fight 'corruption.'

'I just drove from New York,' the actress told a crowd of Sanders supporters waiting to see the senator at a Philadelphia college tonight. 'You might have heard we had a little bit of difficulty in our primary in New York.'

Sarandon noted that 'thousands of people couldn't vote' and proclaimed that 'thousands of peoples' votes disappeared.'

'So I'm counting on you all to be super vigilant when you go, to carry a number of someplace to call....if you have any irregularities when you get there because I'm sure you're all gonna vote right?' she said at Sanders' Drexel University rally.

Susan Sarandon suggested tonight that Pennsylvania could be plagued with the same problems as New York in tomorrow's primary and urged Bernie Sanders supporters to come prepared

Sarandon noted that 'thousands of people couldn't vote' in New York City and said, 'I'm counting on you all to be super vigilant when you go, to carry a number of someplace to call....if you have any irregularities when you get there because I'm sure you're all gonna vote right?'

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders gets a hug from actress Sarandon as he takes the stage at Drexel University in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, tonight

The award-winning actress and progressive activist told them, 'If you get there, and there's any kind of problem, deal with it.'

Quoting Kurt Cobain, she said 'the duty of youth is to challenge corruption.'

'Some of you are not completely youthful, you can challenge corruption, too,' she said. 'I do it. I'm old. I do it.'

New York City's Board of Elections threw more than 125,000 Democratic voters off the rolls in Brooklyn ahead of last Tuesday's primary.

At one Brooklyn location, a polling coordinator told CNN that an estimated 10 percent of prospective voters who tried to cast a ballot at that location were unable.

The Board of Elections' executive director told the network that 12,000 voters who were stripped of their rights moved away, 44,000 had election mailers bounce back and 77,000 were determined to be inactive after failing to vote in the last two federal elections and respond to notices informing them of their status.

In the weeks leading up to the election voters inundated the State Board of Elections will complaints that their registration had changed without their consent to another political party, or unaffiliated, depriving them of their right to vote in their preferred primary.

A group of 200 New York voters filed an emergency lawsuit before the polls opened contesting the changes.

The New York Attorney General's office says it received 1,000 complaints through a voter hotline on the day of the primary compared to 150 in 2012.

NY Attorney General Eric Schneiderman said a day later that 'if any New Yorker was illegally prevented from voting, I will do everything in my power to make their vote count and ensure that it never happens again.'

Sanders commented on the drama on election night during a rally in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, calling it 'absurd' that in Brooklyn, where he was born, so many people were purged from the voting rolls.

So far, complaints like the ones directed at the state of New York have not surfaced in Pennsylvania.

Pennsylvania also prohibits independents from voting in its primaries.

Philadelphia District Attorney Seth Williams said his office will have a dedicated number of staffers on hand tomorrow should anything go wrong.