The plaintiff, Timothy Baxter, appeals a judgment of the superior court upholding a Parole Board’s decision to revoke his parole. We affirm.
In October of 1979, the appellant was sentenced to a term of 1 to 6 years for his conviction of grand larceny. All but eight months of this sentence was suspended. The sentence was reimposed in February of 1981 following the revocation of his probation. In October of 1981, the appellant was paroled. Early in 1988, he was called to appear before the Parole Board (Board) for a hearing requested by his parole officer to address allegations that he violated the following conditions of his parole agreement:
Condition No. 1 — Shall commit no crime punishable under the law.
Condition No. 3 — Shall not possess, use, or handle firearms or deadly weapons.
Condition No. U — Shall lead an orderly and industrious life.
Condition No. 5 — Shall work and reside at all times where your supervising Parole Officer directs.
Condition No. 8 — Shall report in writing to your Parole Officer, your residence and place of employment during the first week of each month.
Evidence presented to the Board in support of these allegations included a St. Albans police department incident report which formed the basis of an assault and robbery charge brought against the appellant, * and a letter from a police officer in Virginia indicating that the appellant’s step-brother loaned the appellant his .22 caliber pistol for a few weeks in 1982. Additionally, the Board heard testimony from the appellant’s parole officer and the appellant’s mother. The appellant denied all the allegations but did not himself testify to rebut them.
At the close of the hearing, based on the evidence presented, the Board found that the appellant violated the 5 conditions of *647 parole as alleged, and based on this finding, revoked the appellant’s parole and returned him to confinement.
■ On appeal, the appellant raises three issues for our consideration: first, that the Board should have excluded certain exhibits from its consideration; second, that there was insufficient evidence to support the Board’s conclusion that defendant violated three of the conditions of his parole; and third, that the Board was not competent to determine that appellant had committed a new crime in violation of the first condition of his parole.
I.
Appellant contends that the St. Albans police report and the letter from the police officer in Virginia should not have been considered by the Board. He claims that the use of these documents, instead of live testimony, as evidence to support the Board’s finding that conditions 1, 3 and 4 were violated, constituted a violation of his due process right to confront and cross-examine adverse witnesses.
Morrissey
v.
Brewer,
II.
The appellant’s second claim is that there was insufficient evidence presented to the Board to support its finding that conditions 1, 3 and 4 were violated. A parole violation must be established by substantial evidence. 28 V.S.A. § 552(b)(2). This requires that there be “‘such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to sup
*648
port a conclusion.’ ”
Richardson
v.
Perales,
Furthermore, judicial review of an agency’s findings is very limited.
State of Vermont Department of Taxes
v.
Tri-State Industrial Laundries, Inc.,
The appellant asserts that the only evidence before the Board supporting its findings concerning a violation of conditions 1, 3 and 4 was the police report and the letter. He then claims that, as uncorroborated hearsay, this cannot constitute substantial evidence. See
Consolidated Edison, supra,
III.
Lastly, the appellant argues that the Board was not competent to determine that appellant had committed a new crime and therefore it could not find that appellant violated the first condition of his parole unless the appellant had previously been convicted of this new crime. A conviction, however, would be only one way in- which the Board could find that appellant violated a condition of his parole by committing a new crime. A conviction is' not required to show that a new crime has been committed by the parolee. The conviction of a crime is very different from a finding by a parole board that a' parolee has committed a new crime. The mandates of due process and the standard of proof are substantially less rigid at a revocation hearing than at á criminal trial.
Morrissey
v.
Brewer, supra,
408. U.S. at 489. Thus, it can arise, as it has here, that a parole board is able to find a violation of parole because the parolee has committed a new crime even though the parolee may never be convicted for that crime. See, e.g.,
Mack
v.
McCune, supra,
Similarly, we find no error in the Board making a determination that the appellant committed a new crime. Administrative boards are frequently required to interpret statutes and decide questions of law and fact incidental to their administrative duties. See
In re Village of Hardwick Electric Department,
Affirmed.
Notes
Following a jury trial, which took place after the parole revocation ■hearing, the appellant was found not guilty of this offense.
