A teen terror dubbed the real life Vicky Pollard has been booted out of her home.

Last night her long-suffering neighbours told how they were subjected to an 18-month error campaign by the unrepentant yob.

Kerry Mclaughlin was evicted from her Wallsend home after terrorising law abiding residents with constant abuse and deafening music.

The 19-year-old was also given a two-year Asbo banning her from the area where she used to live and preventing her from contacting her neighbours.

Retired care worker Ann Brooks, 65, who lived next door in Belsay Close, Battle Hill, said: "It was absolutely terrible. I barely slept for 18 months. It affected my health, I have high blood pressure and I could feel myself getting more and more worked up.

"I was working at the time and I would go to work like a zombie because I hadn't slept.

"Mclaughlin and her friends would play loud music until 6am and be drinking and shouting in the street and on a few occasions they were sick right outside my door.

"I remember a time they climbed onto my roof and left it littered with cans and bottles. The would just laugh at the police.

"I'm over the moon she's not coming back. It's absolute bliss."

Mclaughlin was appearing before North Shields County Court, at Royal Quays, to face a possession order and Asbo application. She handed the keys in before the case, surrendering her tenancy.

Mclaughlin's solicitor told the court the teenager was planning to move out of the region.

Deputy District Judge Derek Morgan Imposed a two-year Asbo banning her from Battle Hill, stopping her causing nuisance or annoyance to anyone in Belsay Close and preventing her from contacting Mrs Brooks.

Foul-mouthed Mclaughlin has made life a misery for neighbours, who made a staggering 111 complaints about her to police and council officials since October 2003.

Incidents include: binding teenagers to lampposts outside her house, screaming obscenities, threatening strangers with a hammer, breaking windows in her own home and throwing wheelie bins at neighbours' cars.

After the case a spokesman for North Tyneside Council said: "We would like to thank the police for their hard work and support.

"We would also like to thank local people themselves for their patience and confidence they have shown in the council while its been dealing with a complex and sometimes difficult case."