Her claims of having a seizure will not amount to a hill of beans as far as the Florida DMV is concerned. The seizures will have to be diagnosed by a certified medical doctor before they would effect her ability to get a drivers license.
Unless you are a certified medical doctor, and have examined Casey Anthony, writing the DMV with hearsay information, will be a waste of your time, and theirs.
Bsides, your hearsay info is based on something Casey said, and everyone knows EVERYTHING she says is a lie, so why would anyone believe the seizure stories?
By the way, in Florida it's two years after a seizure before you can drive unless you are under regular medical supervision, where it becomes 6 months.
Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles Division of Drivers Licenses
1.Applicants and licensed drivers should be seizure free for a period of two years before being approved for licensing; but, if under regular medical supervision, may apply at the end of six months for review by the Medical Advisory Board. "Petit mal" or absence seizures and partial seizures with complex symptomatology will also follow these guidelines. The isolated seizure with a normal electroencephalogram may be reviewed at the end of three months.
2.Applicants and licensed drivers who have been approved after six months seizure free may be required to submit follow-up reports at the end of one year from date of approval.
3.Applicants and licensed drivers who have had a chronic recurring seizure disorder (or have been treated for such for one year) and medications have been discontinued will not be licensed to drive during the period of drug with-drawal and for a period of three months following complete cessation of treatment. If the patient has seizures during this period, licensing may be considered after a three-month seizure free interval upon return to adequate therapy.
4.If there is a question about the seizure type or the medication the applicant or licensed driver is on, it is the prerogative of the Medical Board to question the treating physician further in an effort to clarify the nature of the seizures.
5.Blood levels below therapeutic levels are to be considered on an individual basis.
6.Applicants and licensed drivers with only chronic nocturnal seizures will be considered on an individual basis.
7.Applicants and licensed drivers with syncopal episodes who have no clear diagnosis established will be considered on an individual basis.
http://www.doh.state.fl.us/family/epilepsy/DrivingG.html
Interestingly enough, in Florida, physicians are not required to report a patient with epilepsy to the Division of Driver Licenses.