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				 The 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said a lower court 
				judge erred in dismissing claims by the woman after Hagar, 66, 
				accused her in his 2011 autobiography "Red: My Uncensored Life 
				in Rock" of extortion by naming him as the father. 
 Identified as "Jane Doe" in court papers, the woman claimed she 
				had an intermittent five-year affair with Hagar in the 1980s, 
				and became pregnant with his son after a June 1988 Van Halen 
				concert in Detroit. She lived in Lansing, Michigan, at the time 
				and later moved to Waterloo, Iowa.
 
 Writing for a three-judge appeals court panel, Circuit Judge 
				Myron Bright said the woman could pursue claims of libel, 
				invasion of privacy and breach of a confidentiality agreement.
 
 
				
				 
				"Under Iowa law, an accusation that a person is a liar is 
				defamatory as a matter of law," Bright wrote. "Indeed, Hagar's 
				statements regarding Doe's criminality, dishonesty, and sexual 
				exploits have a natural tendency to provoke Doe to wrath or 
				expose her to public hatred, contempt, or ridicule within the 
				community of individuals that recognize her as the subject."
 
 The 8th Circuit upheld the dismissal of a claim alleging 
				intentional infliction of emotional distress.
 
 Wesley Kinnear, a lawyer for Hagar, said he had yet to discuss 
				the decision with his client.
 
 "We are disappointed that the Court of Appeals didn't affirm the 
				lower court decision in its entirety," he said. "We look forward 
				to the next step."
 
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			David Brown, a lawyer for Doe, said his client is "excited that 
			she'll have her day in court. We think ultimately that Jane Doe will 
			be fully vindicated, and that Mr. Hagar will be held fully 
			accountable."
 In his memoir, Hagar denied being the father, but said he agreed to 
			pay the woman money during her pregnancy in exchange for her silence 
			about his alleged paternity because his manager thought it was "the 
			smart thing" to do.
 
 The woman said she received $7,000 from Hagar.
 
 Her son Dylan was born on Feb. 27, 1989, and died five days later. 
			Hagar wrote he did not hear from the woman after the boy's death. No 
			paternity tests were conducted.
 
 "Obviously, it wasn't my baby, and they knew it," he wrote. "They 
			just extorted me as long as they could."
 
 The 8th Circuit returned the case to Chief Judge Linda Reade of the 
			U.S. District Court in Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
 
 (Reporting by Jonathan Stempel in New York; Editing by David 
			Gregorio and Andre Grenon)
 
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