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coach signature collection Obama has said he was once followed in stores. But according to shoppers interviewed Monday, many people don't recognize how prevalent retail discrimination is, and how the consistent stream of small insults adds up to a large problem."It's one thing if you don't understand. But don't ever tell me it doesn't happen to me," said Natasha Eubanks, who shops often at high end stores in New York City. "You can't assume it doesn't happen just because it doesn't happen to you."Sometimes, Eubanks said, it takes clerks more than five minutes to simply acknowledge her presence. Or they brush her off after a token greeting. Or they ask her question after question: "You're a black girl up in Chanel. They want to know what you're doing here, and what you do for a living."She says she has dealt with this type of treatment at least 20 times in New York City. "It feels differently than when you go into a store and are treated properly."Trayvon Christian's problem was not how he was treated when he went into Barneys New York it was what happened afterward. In a lawsuit filed last week, the 19 year old said that he bought a Ferragamo belt at the Manhattan store, and when he left he was accosted by undercover city police officers.According to the lawsuit, police said Christian "could not afford to make such an expensive purchase." He was arrested and detained, though he showed police the receipt, the debit card he used and identification, the lawsuit said.After Christian's lawsuit was filed, another black Barneys shopper said she was accused of fraud after purchasing a $2,500 handbag, and the black actor Robert