Former Supreme Court Chief Yang Sung-tae currently in detention has hired another lawyer to prepare for what will be a tough legal battle over allegations that he politically influenced trials to lobby the previous government, sources said Sunday.

Former Supreme Court Chief Yang Sung-tae walks out of the Seoul Central District Court in Seoul on Jan. 23, 2019, after being arraigned over his arrest warrant. (Yonhap)

Yang has recently brought in judge-turned-lawyer Lee Sang-won in addition to his two legal representatives, as he appears likely to face an unprecedented corruption probe as the former head of the country's judiciary.

On Thursday, he was put in detention as a suspect facing at least 40 counts of criminal charges. He denies all charges.

Yang stands accused of using or seeking to use trials as political leverage to lobby the office of then President Park Geun-hye to get her approval for the establishment of a separate court of appeals, his pet project. Yang headed the top court from 2011-2017.

He is also accused of having orchestrated a delay in the deliberation of a damages suit filed by Korean victims of Japan's wartime forced labor to curry favor with the former president, who was seeking amicable ties with Tokyo.

He purportedly pressured judges in charge of such trials to deliver verdicts in Park's favor and disadvantaged the judges who were opposed to establishing another appeals court. (Yonhap)

저작권자 © The Korea Post 무단전재 및 재배포 금지