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Blago trial: Favor from Emanuel or no grant $

CHICAGO - A former top aide to Rod Blagojevich testified yesterday that the former governor planned to hold up a $2 million grant to a school in then-U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel's district until the congressman's Hollywood-agent brother held a fundraiser.

CHICAGO - A former top aide to Rod Blagojevich testified yesterday that the former governor planned to hold up a $2 million grant to a school in then-U.S. Rep. Rahm Emanuel's district until the congressman's Hollywood-agent brother held a fundraiser.

Former Illinois Deputy Gov. Bradley Tusk said at Blagojevich's corruption trial that he ignored the governor's directive to deliver the message to Emanuel.

Tusk said that he thought the plan was "both illegal and unethical."

Tusk said that he started hearing from Emanuel and his staff in 2006 about the need to quickly get the grant to build a sports field, and that he told them the governor's office would try to deal with it. Tusk said when he talked to Blagojevich about the grant, the governor said he wouldn't release the money until Emanuel's brother held the fundraiser.

"Bills started to pile up, and we didn't have the money yet," Donald Feinstein, who helped oversee the school, testified earlier. "People wanted to get paid, and we weren't able to pay them."

In cross-examining Tusk, Blagojevich's attorney appeared to suggest that whatever remarks Blagojevich made to Tusk about threatening Emanuel were merely heat-of-the-moment comments - something Tusk agreed earlier that the governor was prone to.

There was nothing in the indictment of Blagojevich to suggest that Emanuel - now President Obama's chief of staff - was actually threatened.

Blagojevich, 53, has pleaded not guilty to scheming to sell or trade the U.S. Senate seat President Obama gave up following his November 2008 election.

He also has pleaded not guilty to plotting to launch a racketeering scheme using the powers of the governor's office.

If convicted, Blagojevich could face up to $6 million in fines and a sentence of 415 years in prison, although he is certain to get much less under federal guidelines.

His brother, Nashville, Tenn., businessman Robert Blagojevich, 54, has pleaded not guilty to taking part in the alleged scheme to sell the Senate seat and to plotting to illegally pressure a racetrack owner for a $100,000 campaign contribution.

The racetrack owner, John Johnston, testified earlier yesterday that he was angry after being pressured to make the contribution - by a lobbyist who was supposed to be working for him - in exchange for the governor's signature on a bill that would help the horse-racing industry.

Johnston said he felt uncomfortable talking about fundraising with members of the governor's inner circle and often tried to change the subject when they brought it up.

But he said the lobbyist, Alonzo Monk, made it clear in a conversation on Dec. 3, 2008, that the governor would sign the bill as soon as Johnston had made the contribution. Blagojevich was arrested six days later, and the contribution was never made. Blagojevich signed the bill a week after his arrest.

Johnston quoted Monk as saying in late 2008: "I spoke to the governor and he's concerned that if he signs the racing legislation, you might not be forthcoming with a contribution."

Johnston testified that he was angry. But he testified, "I would imagine, if I made a contribution, they'd cash the check and he'd sign the bill."

Monk, who was Blagojevich's former chief of staff, testified last week that Blagojevich withheld signing the bill as a way to pressure Johnston for the contribution, as the governor allegedly tried to raise as much money as possible before a new campaign-ethics law kicked in Jan. 1. Monk has pleaded guilty to plotting to pressure Johnston for campaign money.