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advertising on our websites. These include (but are not limited to) Specific Media, The Rubicon Project, AdJug, AdConion, Context Web. Please click on the provider name to visit their opt out page.Bogus goods abound in OhioCentral Ohioans can buy counterfeit goods without straying far from the Outerbelt, or even leaving home.In the suburbs, purse parties are a new spin on Tupperware parties. Friends, neighbors and relatives, usually women, get together in homes for chitchat and a chance to buy copies of designer goods."I think it's fairly widespread," said Sgt. Craig Hungler, a Dublin police detective who helped break up a purse party ring in 2004. "But I don't think the average citizen recognizes it's illegal and that anything bad can come from where all these profits are going."Nationally, 90 percent of respondents to a recent Gallup survey said they wouldn't have bought fake products if they had known their purchases supported organized crime.Columbus Craig's List is a largely unregulated online version of newspaper classified ads. A recent search for "knockoff" turned up purses: Kate Spade in Delaware, Dooney Burke in Westerville and Gucci in Hilliard."Kate Spade handbag knockoff, so cute $25," said one ad with a photo of the offending merchandise.Kayleigh Ackerson bought a bogus Gucci purse at a local thrift shop for $14. She suspected it was fake but was hoping it was the real thing, which would sell for $1,300."From afar, you could never tell," the 19 year old Hilliard resident said. "But once you touch it, you can tell it's not real leather."Ackerson said most people her age can't