Amagansett Graffiti was discovered at the back of the restrooms in the parking lot at Atlantic Avenue Beach on Aug. 20. Partially illegible, it began with, “As long as Bloods.” The East Hampton Town Parks and Recreation Department did not estimate the cost of repairing the damage. East Hampton Village Officers got involved in a dispute occurring right outside the dispatching headquarters at the Emergency Services Building on Cedar Street on Sunday a little after 10 a.m. A 51-year-old woman told police she did not want her live-in boyfriend arrested, but did want him to keep away from her. Police escorted the 48-year-old man to the couple’s house so he could retrieve some personal belongings. He then left on a bicycle. Police responded after two sisters fought on Race Lane on Sunday at 12:40 p.m. A 24-year-old woman said her sister scratched her and that she wanted to file a report, but did not wish to press charges. An officer spoke to the 36-year-old sister, who said she had been pushed and was trying to defend herself. Police advised both women to stay away from each other, and they agreed. Montauk A $1,200 electric scooter with a flat tire was stolen from along Edgemere Road on Sept. 4. Jurgita Peciukeviciute told police she was riding her boss’s scooter to work at the BuddhaBerry frozen yogurt shop when the tire went flat somewhere between the Surf Lodge and the Montauk Firehouse at about 10 a.m. She walked the rest of the way, and when she went back to get the scooter at 6:30 p.m. it was gone. The scooter’s owner, Nancy P. Passaretti, said she didn’t know the make or model of the scooter. As of Sept. 20, it was still missing. Three coolers full of assorted fishing equipment that had been taped shut and put in the warehouse at Uihlein’s Marina on West Lake Drive were found ransacked on Sept. 24. Tackle, reels, line, a life jacket, and a sharpening stone, worth some $2,500 in all, were taken. Police are still investigating. About $40 in cash went missing from the register at Gosman’s Clam Bar on Sept. 18. Chris Gosman, the manager, spoke to a suspect, who agreed to repay him. He did not wish to press charges. The words “vegan=compassion,” “stop the killing,” and “vegan” were written with black marker on a concrete wall along South Eaton Street at the Oceanside Beach Resort sometime between Aug. 14 and 19. “Vegan” was also scrawled on the exterior wall on South Eaton Street next to one of the rooms. Ken Walles, who owns the resort, said he would clean off the writing. Police also found several traffic signs on Second House Road with similar markings. About $300 in damage was done when someone wrote “vegan” on a 1988 Land Rover that was parked in the Kirk Park Beach parking lot on Aug. 18 and 19. Lauren M. Chu of Montauk filed a report on Aug. 20. She had been enjoying a bonfire on the beach. Back on Aug. 8, Richard Monahan, a town lifeguard, reported that support posts that hold tarps near the lifeguard stand at Kirk Park Beach and at the beach at South Edison Street were partially burned. The Red Bull volleyball net and posts near the lifeguard stand at South Edison were also destroyed. He believed bonfires were to blame. The damage was estimated at $400. Sag Harbor Employees at Flying Point Surf and Sport reported two incidents of shoplifting last week. On Sept. 23, a $166 parka and a $35 beanie were reported missing from the Main Street store at 1:40 p.m. On Friday, a ?pocket-knife was stolen at about 4 p.m. Police were able to track down the man seen on video surveillance swiping the knife, however, and he subsequently paid $86.90 for it. No charges were filed. An iPhone was reported stolen from a car parked on Long Island Avenue on Sept. 24 around noon. Randall Apt did not provide an estimated value for his phone. Angelica Uribe Anguilar said $80 had been withdrawn from her Capital One account between Sept. 2 and Sept. 22 at various A.T.M. machines. No further information was provided. A woman who reported a burglary at her house on Division Street on Saturday wasn’t sure what exactly had been taken. She and her sister hadn’t been at the house for two months. Police are awaiting more information. Springs Four large stumps were removed from a backyard on Old Stone Highway without the permission of Charles Savage, the homeowner, between Sept. 18 and 21. Wires straightening a tree were damaged, along with grass and landscaping. Mr. Savage estimated the damage at $100. On Aug. 19, graffiti in blue paint was found on the outside wall at the Maidstone Park pavilion. It read, “To see with the eyes, unclouded by hate.” An unwanted guest at the Springs School refused to leave on Sept. 22, and police were called at 1:52 p.m. The man had been told he would need to make an appointment in order to see the principal. The principal, Eric Casale, told the man, a Springs resident, not to return to the school “without cause” or he would press charges.