"QUESTION: Do you know of any case anywhere that’s held that an unborn fetus is a person within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment? MR. FLOWERS: No, sir, we can only go back to what the framers of our Constitution had in mind. QUESTION: Well, these weren’t the framers that wrote the Fourteenth Amendment. It came along much later. MR. FLOWERS: No, sir. I understand. But the Fifth Amendment, under the Fifth Amendment: no one shall be deprived of the right to life, liberty, and property without the due process of law. QUESTION: Yes, but then the Fourteenth Amendment defines “person” as somebody who’s born, doesn’t it? MR. FLOWERS: I’m not sure about that, sir. I -- QUESTION: All right. Any person born or naturalized in the United States. MR. FLOWERS: Yes, sir. QUESTION: It doesn’t – that’s not the definition of a “person” but that’s the definition of a “citizen”. MR. FLOWERS: Your Honor it’s our position that the definition of a person is so basic, it’s so fundamental that the framers of the Constitution had not even set out to define. We can only go to what the teachings at the time the Constitution was framed. We have numerous listings in the brief by Mr. Joe Witherspoon, a professor at the University of Texas, that tries to trace back what was in their mind when they had the “person” concept when they drew up the Constitution. He quoted Blackstone here in 1765, and he observed, in his commentaries, that: “Life. This right is inherent by nature in every individual, and exists even before the child is born.”"
Roe v. Wade

January 1, 1970

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pp.24-25

https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Roe_v._Wade