HUNTSVILLE, Alabama -- Additional charges were filed today against Carl Philip Herold, who is being held on a $1 million cash bond on a multitude of charges including sexual torture and allowing his child to be depicted in child pornography.

The new charges filed against Herold Wednesday are two felony counts of complicity-sodomy in the first degree and a misdemeanor charge of complicity-sexual abuse.

Herold and his domestic partner Charles Walker Dunnavant, who lived together on the 3000 block of Lakewood Drive N.W., in Huntsville both face multiple counts including sodomy and child sexual abuse.

Herold was arrested in November and Dunnavant, a Lincoln County, Tenn. native, was arrested last month. Herold now faces a total of 20 charges and Dunnavant is charged with 14 offenses, though prosecutors dropped a charge of knowingly transmitting or exposing a person to a Sexually Transmitted Disease.

The two men were scheduled to have a preliminary hearing on the charges yesterday, but after the attorneys from both sides conferred with District Judge Alison Austin, the hearing was moved to Feb. 26. Prosecutors had notified the court they planned to show a video of Herold's more than three-hour interview with Huntsville Police Department investigators.

The case is also being investigated by the FBI and prosecutors have said related charges could be filed in a number of jurisdictions some far away from Madison County.

Madison County Assistant District Attorney Jason Scully-Clemmons and Assistant DA Gabrielle Helix, who are prosecuting the cases, have argued Herold's son, who is the alleged victim, was essentially held captive while living in Huntsville.

Scully-Clemmons said the boy was under constant surveillance, but never actually locked up. He was never enrolled in school, never received normal immunizations and never had unsupervised play or outings, according to police investigators.

Dunnavant, a former loan officer at Redstone Federal Credit Union is also being held on a $1 million cash-only bond.

Herold, a Wyoming native taught a popular online computer class. The class is unrelated to the charges against him.