By NBC News staff and wire reports
WASHINGTON PARK, Ill. -- A teenage girl reported missing more than two years ago escaped from a home in southwestern Illinois where she said she was held captive and repeatedly sexually assaulted, authorities said Thursday.
Police in Washington Park, a village next to East St. Louis, said the girl reported that she was raped by her captor, got pregnant and had a baby.
In April 2010, St. Louis, Mo., police listed the girl as a missing or runaway juvenile. She was 15 when she disappeared.
'Beaten almost every day'
She escaped from the home in Washington Park earlier this week and went to police, saying her child was still in the house.
KSDK reporter Talia Kaplan said: "She told police she was not allowed out of the house and was sexually assaulted and beaten almost every day."
About two dozen members of a SWAT team wearing helmets and body armor swarmed the home Thursday afternoon with their assault rifles drawn. They recovered the two-year-old child and arrested a 24-year-old man.
Read more on this story from NBC station KSDK
One of the officers carried the child — apparently unharmed — in his arms, and a white sheet was draped over the child's head to conceal the toddler's identity. The child was taken away in a waiting ambulance.
Washington Park Police Chief David Clark said it appears the man's mother assisted in the crime. She was also taken into custody. Police would not identify either of them by name because they had not been charged as of Thursday evening.
The teen told police she was held against her will. She reported trying to escape several times but told police that her captor chased her down each time and forced her back to the home at gunpoint.
NBC station KSDK reported:
"She told police as she tried to escape a suspect tried to pull her back into the home, but her relatives were at the scene and helped her escape and contact police. "
Police said the teen also told them she was forced by the man and his mother to give a false name in medical records during her pregnancy and when the child was born.
A neighbor, Lakeitha Smith, told several local TV stations that she saw the girl from time to time outside the house and never witnessed anything that would raise concern.
"I used to see her come out of the house, back and forth," Smith said. "I didn't think she was being held hostage in the house."
Speaking to KSDK, Smith described the occupants of the home as "pretty nice people and regular neighbors."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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