A female police captain in Indiana is on paid administrative leave after telling a colleague that he benefited from “white male privilege” during a transgender awareness session.

The future of Capt. Carri Weber with the Plainfield Police Department will be determined during a commissioners meeting Thursday, WRTV reports. The “extremely offensive” remark in question was made during a Nov. 1 training seminar featuring representatives from the US Department of Justice and a US attorney on how police officers can better interact with transgender people in their communities.

A 28-year veteran of the department then questioned a statistic presented during the session indicating that transgender people are 3.32 times more likely to experience police violence compared to non-transgender people. The stat, according to the station, comes from 2012 data from the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs.

“My wife has never been part of police violence,” one unidentified officer in the room said while questioning the statistic, according to video obtained by WISH. “Most people that I know have never been, accused the police of violence. So I guess I don’t get where that statistic comes from.”

“Because your white male privilege, so you wouldn’t know,” a woman — identified in multiple local reports as Weber — responds from off-camera.

“I’m sorry?” a man asks.

“Your white male privilege,” the woman repeats.

“Wow, I am done with this training,” a man replies.

One of the instructors tried to lower the tension in the room after the remark, but was unsuccessful, WRTV reports.

“Chief, are you going to let her get away with that?” one officer said. “Seriously? I’m asking a legitimate question and I’m getting [unintelligible] white privilege? Are you serious? I find that extremely offensive … I will leave.”

One unidentified officer later filed a complaint against Weber in connection with the remark.

“I was racially and sexistly slurred by Captain Carri Weber while I was asking a question of the instructor in training,” the officer wrote, according to WRTV. “I am now firmly aware of the discriminatory belief she just verbally communicated … There is no place in the Plainfield Police administration or supervision for someone who holds and espouses her discriminatory views.”

Weber was placed on administrative leave Nov. 16, WRTV reports. She was also suspended by the department in August for violating its drug and alcohol use policies after she admitted driving her police cruiser within eight hours of drinking and having alcohol in her department-issued vehicle, according to the station.