SALEM – As he sentenced her former boyfriend to the maximum of 18-to 20-years in state prison for her rape, a Superior Court judge said the circumstances a Swampscott nanny found herself in last year were like a “horror movie.”Raymond Streed, 37, of Salem and Woburn, went on trial last week on charges of aggravated rape, kidnapping, burglary and assault on an occupant, assault and battery causing serious bodily injury and threatening to commit murder.The jury comprised of six women and six men deliberated for about three and one-half hours over a two-day span before finding him guilty Monday morning of five counts of simple rape, as well as kidnapping, breaking and entering with intent to commit a misdemeanor, a lesser offense, assault and battery causing serious bodily injury and threatening to commit murder.In handing down the punishment, Judge Howard J. Whitehead described Streed as a “dangerous person,” and said the victim, then 28-years-old, found herself in a “very dangerous circumstance, terrifying beyond description.”Whitehead noted that the impact statement presented to the court by the victim said that Streed is “not the person he wants to be,” and the judge agreed saying that Streed appears to be a quiet man when he speaks, but that it is clear he “experiences anger and has dangerous impulses toward his women, despite his desires to behave in society.”Streed, who was living at a sober house on Emmerton Street in Salem at the time of the crime, showed little emotion as the sentence was imposed.In somewhat of an unusual incident, nine of the 12 sitting jurors remained in the courtroom while Streed was sentenced, but declined comment following the imposition of the punishment.On Feb. 18, 2006, Streed went to the Swampscott home at 45 Fort Avenue Extension where the victim worked as a nanny and confronted her on the third floor after breaking a window to gain entrance, even though she had ended their month-long relationship 12 days before.The family whom she worked for was away on a ski trip in Vermont at the time.She was alone in the house, and had shut off her cell phone, but Streed continually kept calling the house phone that day. She then heard footsteps coming toward her bedroom door, opened it and was in turn beaten by Streed for five minutes, breaking her eye socket and causing significant bruising on her upper arm and body.For the next 12 hours, Streed did “violent and disgusting” things to her, forcing her into both oral sex and intercourse, Assistant District Attorney Kristen R. Buxton said in her closing summation.She was in “survival mode, was scared and in fear of her life,” Buxton told jurors.Eventually the couple left the Swampscott home to get something to eat and drove to Salem. When Streed got out of her car to buy some liquor on Loring Avenue, she fled and drove to the police station in Salem and reported the incident to authorities.Buxton asked Whitehead to sentence Streed to the maximum under the law for rape, which is 20 years, saying the facts alone bear the maximum.She said the ordeal read almost like a “scary movie,” as she pointed out to Whitehead that three other women, reportedly from the Newburyport area, had previously sought protection from Streed in 2000 and 2001.Defense lawyer Mark B. Schmidt said his client was born in Waltham, grew up in Nashua, N.H. and graduated from a New Hampshire university in 1995 with his bachelors degree.He said he worked as a lab technician, chemist, carpenter and did framing and remolding, while acknowledging his client has a “serious alcohol problem,” and lived in a sober house in Woburn at the time he met the victim before moving to a sober house in Salem when the events took place.He told Whitehead that since his arrest, Streed has had an “epiphany” in religion and accepted Christ as his savior.”Alcohol intoxication,” Schmidt emphasized, played a large role in the events, as he told Whitehead that his client has expressed “extreme remorse.” Schmidt asked