State v. Zink

CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 3, 2025
Docket25-334
StatusUnpublished

This text of State v. Zink (State v. Zink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Zink, (N.C. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

An unpublished opinion of the North Carolina Court of Appeals does not constitute controlling legal authority. Citation is disfavored, but may be permitted in accordance with the provisions of Rule 30(e)(3) of the North Carolina Rules of Appellate Procedure.

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA

No. COA25-334

Filed 3 December 2025

Buncombe County, Nos. 22CR084628-100, 22CR084436-100

STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA

v.

BART WILLIAM ZINK, Defendant.

Appeal by Defendant from judgment entered 11 July 2024 by Judge Alan Z.

Thornburg in Buncombe County Superior Court. Heard in the Court of Appeals 23

September 2025.

Attorney General Jeff Jackson, by Assistant Attorney General Tanner J. Ray, for the State.

Appellate Defender Glenn Gerding, by Assistant Appellate Defender David S. Hallen, for Defendant.

GRIFFIN, Judge.

Defendant argues the trial court erred in denying his motion to dismiss his

felony secret peeping charge because the State failed to present substantial evidence

that he filmed the victim “secret or surreptitiously,” a necessary element of the

charge. We disagree and find no error.

I. Factual and Procedural Background STATE V. ZINK

Opinion of the Court

On 20 May 2022, T.B. went to Defendant’s house in West Asheville in

Buncombe County for “a party, get-together.” T.B. testified she had a “[v]ery vague”

relationship with Defendant, as she met him through playing pool and a mutual

friend. She further testified that at 9:00 PM Defendant called and invited her to the

party that same night. Defendant listed several of her friends when inviting her to

the party “to play music, maybe have a bonfire, and it’s great that we have so many

mutual friends that we can all associate with each other together.” T.B. showed up

at Defendant’s house sometime after 10:00 PM with a six-pack of “Juicy Haze IPA”

stout beer, containing alcohol content level of over 9%. T.B. was the only guest at

Defendant’s house when she arrived.

T.B. testified when she entered Defendant’s house, Defendant pushed her “to

smoke a joint that he rolled that he said that was particularly for [her].” T.B.

eventually “sparked” it but set it down. T.B. testified that she had taken

cyclobenzaprine, a prescribed muscle relaxer, at 6:00 or 7:00 PM that evening.

During her initial time in Defendant’s house, T.B. began drinking her first beer while

Defendant showed her various items. T.B. testified she visited the bathroom, and,

upon exiting saw Defendant holding her beer. When T.B. questioned him, Defendant

responded, “you’re not drinking fast enough. Let’s finish this and have another one,

and let’s hang out.” T.B. had another beer and one shot of whiskey “from an airplane

bottle,” all of which T.B. testified Defendant saw her drink. T.B. testified that, in

sum, she had at least two beers, one shot of whiskey, and had inhaled some marijuana

-2- STATE V. ZINK

on top of her muscle relaxer prescription.

No one else came to Defendant’s house during this time, and T.B. told

Defendant “multiple times” she was ready to go home. However, Defendant would

request they “play another set” of music and “have another beer.” T.B. stayed and

played guitar. T.B. testified she and Defendant “stayed pretty far away from each

other the entire night,” but at one point after she finished playing a set, Defendant

tried to give T.B. a high-five. T.B. declined saying, “I’m not an affectionate person,

and I don’t do high-fives.” After a few hours at Defendant’s house, T.B. was not

feeling well and, according to her testimony, was told by Defendant she seemed “a

little intoxicated.” T.B. testified the last thing she remembered was her saying to

Defendant, “I’m going to sit down for 15 minutes, and then I am going home.” T.B.

laid down on Defendant’s reclining chair.

When T.B. woke up she was in Defendant’s bed, and, as she testified,

Defendant was behind her whispering “[y]ou’re a rock star with a rockin’ body” and

masturbating. Upon T.B.’s questioning Defendant about what he was saying, how

she ended up in his bed, and how long he had been in there, he jumped off the bed,

appearing “sweaty and red,” and said, “[o]h, no. I just -- I just came and laid down

for a second. You just -- you just passed out and fell asleep. Everything is fine.” T.B.

testified that she heard “something electronic” during the night, “[l]ike, when you

take a picture, the snap,” but did not know at the time and did not suspect Defendant

had taken a photo at that time.

-3- STATE V. ZINK

T.B. then left Defendant’s house but testified that the sound she had heard

was bothering her, so she returned to Defendant’s house to see his phone. When she

returned Defendant was on the phone with his brother, and T.B. pretended she

wanted to speak to Defendant’s brother. T.B. put the brother on speakerphone and

went through Defendant’s picture gallery. T.B. found what she believed to be a photo

of herself on Defendant’s phone, identifying the shirt she was wearing and her custom

tattoo, sent the photo to her phone, and deleted the photo from his phone. T.B. left

Defendant’s house and returned to her own home, where she realized what she

thought was the photo from Defendant’s phone, which she now had on her phone, was

a video. T.B. testified she had never been in Defendant’s room prior and, upon playing

the video, recognized the bedding in the video as Defendant’s bedding, the checkered

shorts as the shorts Defendant was wearing that night, and herself. The video

depicted Defendant exposing and fondling T.B.’s nipples and manipulating T.B.’s

hand to masturbate himself. T.B. testified she never gave Defendant permission for

the actions in the video, nor did she remember them happening.

T.B. confronted Defendant about the video in a series of messages, with

Defendant saying he did not “remember the evening hours from 1[:00 A.M.]” On the

afternoon of 22 May 2022, T.B. reported the crime and video to police. On 13 July

2022, T.B. received a voicemail from Defendant saying, he “did ruin [his] life that

day,” left town when T.B. threatened him, “wish[ed] [they] could resolve[] something,”

“perhaps [they] could come up with monetary compensation for [her] to try to put it

-4- STATE V. ZINK

behind [them] both,” and was “very sad that [he] hurt [T.B.] and [his] family and [his]

friends.”

Defendant was arrested in Michigan on 18 August 2022 and transported to

North Carolina in mid-September of 2022. On 1 May 2023, Defendant was indicted

on a charge of sexual battery in file number 22CRS084436-100 and, upon a

superseding indictment, was indicted for a charge of felony secret peeping on 28

August 2023 in file number 22CRS084628-100, the conviction on appeal to this Court.

At trial, the State called a forensic toxicologist, Paul Glover, as an expert

witness. Mr. Glover produced a report for this case, entered as State’s Exhibit 15,

based on documentation received from the State. The report offered his opinion that

T.B.’s blood alcohol content (“BAC”) “from midnight onward would have been

significant with respect to its impairing effects” and T.B. “would have been mentally

incapacitated and[/]or physically helpless to the contact in this case due to the

ingested substances.” Mr. Glover based his report on factors including T.B.’s age,

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State v. Anderson
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State v. Winkler
780 S.E.2d 824 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 2015)
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State v. Chekanow
809 S.E.2d 546 (Supreme Court of North Carolina, 2018)
State v. Peterson
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
State v. Zink, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-zink-ncctapp-2025.