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Flea Market Fakes: 'GMA' Goes Undercover at N.C. Sting of Counterfeit Merchandise

VIDEO: Learn how you can spot counterfeit merchandise.

That designer flea market bargain you thought you were getting is probably a fake and possibly dangerous.

Counterfeits have existed in New York City for years, but now they're being found in the suburbs and small towns of America.

"GMA" went undercover with authorities in North Carolina for an exclusive investigation.

Click HERE for tips on how you can spot a fake.

Purses, shoes and DVDs are still the most common counterfeits, but investigators are seeing more sinister fakes, too – like electric cords that easily catch fire, contaminated cosmetics, even fake prescription medicines. Now, some states are taking incredibly aggressive steps to stop them.

Operation Faux Pas

The North Carolina Secretary of State's office gathered police officers from across the state to launch Operation Faux Pas, a sting operation designed to nab suspected counterfeiters at a local flea market.

During a police briefing, Sgt. Henry King of the Rocky Mount Police Department explained the plan. "Around this area right here is where the DVDs, shoes and pocketbooks are going to be."

Officers have to catch vendors actually selling the fakes to press charges, so four undercover teams attend the flea market first.

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"Sgt. King's team is going to make a buy - they're going to have the vendor under surveillance," said John Lynch, Special Agent in Charge with the North Carolina Secretary of State's office.

Why so aggressive? Because of one woman, Secretary of State Elaine Marshall.

"If we can make it, somebody can fake it," she said.

Marshall's office runs the most intense anti-counterfeiting operation in the country. They've seized more than $12 million worth of fakes in the past year alone.

Marshall says this is a global issue.

"It absolutely is. Organized crime has found that we as Americans, think it's funny to buy something that we clearly know is a knock-off," she said. "And we don't think any further than that. We don't understand-how did it get here? Who made it? Where is this cash money going?"

You can buy fake products at a fraction of the price, but at what cost? Marshall says some are dangerous, others made by child labor. Plus, North Carolina has seized illegal drugs and weapons that were shipped alongside the counterfeits.

'GMA' Goes Undercover

"We're seriously talking about organized crime. We're talking about Al Qaeda. We're talking about serious terrorists ... laundering things through South America and bringing them to America," she added.

Back at the flea market, "GMA" is undercover, too.

Suddenly, vendors start to pack up.

Some take off running, but they don't get far.

Meanwhile, some flea market patrons rush in to steal some of the vendors' abandoned merchandise.

Officers confiscate the suspected fakes, enough to fill a flatbed truck.

If they spot enough counterfeit merchandise in a vendor's vehicle, they can confiscate that, too.

"You name it, they have it in there," Sgt. King said.

Police arrest six suspects in all. When "GMA" talks to them, most deny selling counterfeits or being part of a larger network.

Because of North Carolina's tough stance, they could face felony charges.

Authorities say often the vendors are low-level players forced to sell to pay off a debt.

Later, at a secret warehouse nearby, officers count and catalog all the merchandise that is now evidence in criminal cases.

The final tally? Alleged counterfeits with an estimated retail value of $712,395.00.

Web Extra Tips: How to Spot a Fake

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