CHICAGO -- After days of searching, Chicago police have taken escaped killer Kamron Taylor into custody. His aunt has been accused of helping him escape.
There will be no bail for the convicted murderer. Appearing before Cook County Judge James Brown Saturday, wearing a black and white striped Department of Corrections jumpsuit, Taylor faced multiple criminal charges for being found with the loaded revolver when he was captured this weekend.
"Kamron Taylor's being charged with felony unlawful use of a weapons charges in our city," Chicago Police Department Lt. Maury Richards said. "He'll also be returned to custody from where he escaped in Kankakee."
Authorities also arrested Taylor's aunt, who was once a guard at the jail, on suspicion of providing him with information that aided his escape.
Tonya Grant, 50, of Kankakee, has been charged with obstructing justice and aiding in escape after authorities say she "substantially assisted" in Taylor's escape. A judge set bond for her at $150,000.
Taylor was taken into custody Friday night around 9 p.m. near 92nd and Stoney Island Avenue on the city's South Side after officers responded to a call about a suspicious person in the area.
After a brief foot chase, two 4th District police officers arrested the 23-year-old. He was carrying a loaded .38 caliber handgun.
"We had no idea initially who he was, but happy to be able to do our job and find out who he was," said Chicago police officer Montilla Oberrian.
Officers said Taylor identified himself as Tryeon Smith of Joliet, an alias he has been known to use. He was eventually positively identified by his tattoos and fingerprints.
"It was a good arrest and got a whole lot better when we found out what was really going on," said Chicago police officer Matthew Kozlovski.
Taylor, who was awaiting sentencing for a 2013 murder conviction, escaped the Jerome Combs Detention Center and had been on the run since early Wednesday. Authorities said he never returned to his cell during lockdown, which went unnoticed by corrections officers at the jail. He escaped by beating and choking a veteran corrections officer, and stealing the guard's uniform during a routine jail check.
"I hope that he is permanently removed from the streets, that he is put into the Illinois Department of Corrections," said Kankakee County Sheriff Tim Bukowski.
Authorities said Taylor could be transferred back downstate in the next few days, possibly sometime this weekend.
No specifics on the condition of the injured guard have been released, only that he is in the hospital and is improving.
The news of escaped prisoner Taylor's capture in Chicago meant relief for the family of the man he murdered some 60 miles away in Kankakee.
Taylor was scheduled to be sentenced in May for killing 21-year-old Nelson Williams Jr. during a robbery in June of 2013. He faces a sentence of 45 years to life.
Williams was shot in the head on his front porch during a scuffle with a man demanding money.
It was an exhausting trial for the family of the victim.
"I knew it was going to come down to this, I just didn't know how long," said Nelson Williams, the victim's father. "But I'm glad it's over with."
Williams says his son wasn't perfect but he certainly didn't deserve to get killed.
When Taylor, who has an extensive record, escaped jail on Wednesday, Williams says the thought crossed his mind briefly that Taylor would come back to hurt someone else.
"I just worried when I go home that he would ambush me like he did my son," Williams said. "After that it's over with."