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afford designer goods but still feel the need to impress."It is deceitful and it does hurt the companies, but if you really want to be in with a certain crowd, they base it on how you look and what you wear," she said.Kelly Morse, Midwest regional director of PICA Corp., a Columbus brand protection and security firm, said brands that appeal to the hip hop crowd are attracting copycats in Columbus and across Ohio.She said two stores on the corner of Hudson Street and McGuffey Road near Crew Stadium carry a variety of counterfeit clothing, including Carhartt jackets, Coco Chanel bags and Rocawear jeans. A minimall just south of Eastland Mall is filled with dozens of shops selling apparently counterfeit jeans, sneakers, purses, watches, DVDs even OSU apparel.Many of the sellers at the mini mall are transient African immigrants who drive from Columbus to New York City for merchandise, she said.A man of Middle Eastern descent who said he owned one of the Hudson Street stores but wouldn't provide his name said that as far as he knows, the brands he carries are authentic, possibly factory seconds. The items sell for less than half of department store versions."The distributors who sell them to me have trucks, tax IDs and invoices. Nobody stops them, so why should we care?" he said. "If the cops tell me not to sell these clothes, then I won't."Customer Emery Dorsey said everyone knows the merchandise is fake."Yeah, we come, but there isn't too much we can do about it," he said. "It's more convenient than getting on the bus and riding to the fashion store that has the real thing."PICA is helping police