June 1, 2026 [recipient name] [recipient address] Re: Debt Validation Request — Fair Debt Collection Practices Act, 15 U.S.C. § 1692g To Whom It May Concern: This is a formal request under the Fair Debt Collection Practices Act for validation of the alleged debt described below: [alleged debt] Facts: [facts] Requested resolution: [desired outcome] Until you provide verification of the debt — including (1) the original contract, (2) a full account history from the original creditor, and (3) proof of your legal authority to collect — you must cease all collection activity, and you may not report this alleged debt to any credit bureau without noting it as disputed. Sincerely, [user full name] [user address]
FDCPA Violation · Arkansas
Is a debt collector calling you at work after being told to stop in Arkansas?
Force them to stop instantly — and build your case for $1,000+ in statutory damages.
Under federal law, this exact tactic is a violation of 15 U.S.C. § 1692c(a)(3). Once a consumer (or their employer) tells a collector that workplace calls are not allowed, every additional call is a separate per-violation FDCPA breach. Use our engine to generate an ironclad Federal Cease & Desist and Debt Validation notice in under 60 seconds.
Your rights in Arkansas
Collection agencies rely on fear and intimidation. Here is the exact consumer rights you hold over them right now.
A debt collector may not contact you at your job if they know or have reason to know your employer prohibits such communication.
Actual damages plus statutory penalties up to $1,000. State remedies stack on top of federal FDCPA damages.
Up to $1,000 in federal statutory damages per consumer lawsuit, plus actual damages (lost wages, discipline at work), plus attorney's fees.
Log every call: date, time, phone number, the agent's name, and any voicemail. Note when you (or HR) verbally told them to stop.
Crucial rule: Once you send an official written Cease & Desist notice, the collector is legally banned from contacting you again — except to confirm they are stopping or to take you to court. If they call you one more time after receiving this letter, you have an open-and-shut lawsuit.
How to stop the harassment today
Finance
Debt Validation Letter
The person, company, or agency this letter is addressed to.
✓ Cites FDCPA § 1692g — must cease collection until validated
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Same violation in other states
- Calling your workplace — Alabama
- Calling your workplace — Alaska
- Calling your workplace — Arizona
- Calling your workplace — California
- Calling your workplace — Colorado
- Calling your workplace — Connecticut
- Calling your workplace — Delaware
- Calling your workplace — Florida