A Lee County, Florida sheriff’s deputy was suspended after he referred to a female colleague as “Captain Boobs,” and she reported his antics to their superiors.

The Lee County Sheriff’s Office launched an internal investigation after a female deputy alleged Deputy Christopher Patricella made the rude comment while the two were training a new recruit at the Lee County Jail, Fox 4 reports.

The female deputy told investigators she was in a room with the trainee when Patrecella waltzed in and said “Hey, Captain Boobs!”

The shocked female deputy responded with an “Excuse me?” and Pantricella shot back: “You know what I’m talking about.”

“She said she was completely shocked and embarrassed and could feel her entire face and ears turn bright red,” NBC 26 reports. “The report also states that she felt Deputy Patricella’s comments were referencing her significant other, who is a captain.”

The female deputy said Pantricella wouldn’t let up, and continued to press her on “why a deputy, sergeant, or lieutenant are not good enough to date, and why she jumped straight to the rank of captain.”

“The report goes on to say he made other disparaging and lewd comments about her dating life and oral sex,” according to NBC 2.

The incident occurred some time in March, but was detailed in an internal report made public on Monday, the News-Press reports.

The report contends Patricella admitted to calling his colleague “Captain Boobs” and said he did not mean to offend her. Patricella alleged he did not make the comment in the way the female deputy described.

“He accepted the findings of the Lee County Sheriff’s Office and vowed to reign in his comments in the future,” International Business Times reports.

The Lee County Sheriff suspended Patricella for three days without pay, and he’s now on a six month probation.

The “Captain Boobs” report was made public the same day as another internal investigation into three deputies and a sergeant in the department that resulted in their termination.

In that case, Sgt. Joseph Barley was fired on April 18 for insubordination due to untruthfulness and false statements made to his superior officer. He was also cited for neglect of duty for willful violation of official procedures or directives, the News-Press reports.

An internal investigation found Barley instructed a deputy to leave an inmate alone and handcuffed to a hospital bed.

The three other deputies – Juanita Saldivar, Nicholas Rieske and Jose Torres – were fired on April 26 after Saldivar allegedly falsified attendance records at the Southwest Florida Public Service Academy for Torres and Rieske on several occasions when the two did not show up for class.