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In this Monday, Jun. 25, 2018, photo, Odilia Romero, a trilingual interpreter in English, Spanish and her native Zapotec, a language from the Mexican state of Oaxaca, poses for a photo at Oaxacan restaurant, La Guelaguetza in Los Angeles. Romero is working to put together interpretation teams who can help attorneys and officials communicate with non-Spanish-speaking indigenous children and their detained parents in an effort to ensure their legal, medical and other needs are met and that they understand immigration proceedings.   (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

In this Monday, Jun. 25, 2018, photo, Odilia Romero, a trilingual interpreter in English, Spanish and her native Zapotec, a language from the Mexican state of Oaxaca, poses for a photo at Oaxacan restaurant, La Guelaguetza in Los Angeles. Romero is working to put together interpretation teams who can help attorneys and officials communicate with non-Spanish-speaking indigenous children and their detained parents in an effort to ensure their legal, medical and other needs are met and that they understand immigration proceedings. (AP Photo/Damian Dovarganes)

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