Defendant Laulette Love challenges the lower court’s imposition as a condition of supervised release that she pay restitution previously ordered by a North Carolina federal district court. We conclude that the imposition of the condition was proper and affirm.
I
In 2001, defendant Laulette Love pleaded guilty in Louisiana district court to one count of attempted and two counts of completed credit card fraud. As part of her plea agreement, she agreed to pay restitution in accordance with the Victim and Witness Protection Act (VWPA)1 and the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act (MYRA),2 statutes respectively allowing and mandating restitution to victims of specified crimes. The court sentenced her to sixteen months of imprisonment to be followed by three years of supervised re*479lease. It also ordered her to pay. $11,000 in restitution to City Financial Bank, one of the victims.
After Love completed her prison term and about one year of supervised release, the Government moved to revoke her release after she tested positive for drug use, absconded from supervised released, was convicted of forgery in Washington state, and had not kept up with her monthly restitution payments. The judge revoked her release and sentenced her to eighteen months of imprisonment followed by eighteen months of supervised release. The judge imposed as a condition of this release not only that Love pay the remaining restitution previously ordered in this case, but also that she should pay about $50,000 in unpaid restitution ordered by a North Carolina federal district court following a credit card fraud conviction in 1993.3 After detailing Love’s lengthy criminal history and multiple convictions for fraud, the court stated that the only reason it was reimposing a term of supervised release was to require Love to pay some of the restitution owed. Love appealed this judgment.
She also filed a motion to correct sentence under Fed.R.Ckim.P. 35, arguing that restitution for losses beyond the scope of conviction could not be imposed as a condition of supervised release under § 3563(b)(2), as applied through § 3583(d), the statute governing conditions of supervised release.4 The district court denied the motion, holding that it had not ordered restitution under that part of § 3583(d) allowing it to impose restitution under § 3563(b)(2), but instead had exercised its power under the last part of § 3583(d), the catch-all provision allowing it to impose conditions “it considers to be appropriate,” to order Love to comply with a previously existing order. Love also appealed this decision, and, pursuant to her motion, the appeals were consolidated because they involve essentially the same issue.
II.
The single, narrow issue in this case is whether a court can impose, as a condition of supervised release, that the defendant pay the unpaid restitution ordered as part of a sentence by another federal court in another federal case.5 Such a question of law is reviewed de novo. 6
A federal court cannot order restitution “except when authorized by statute.”7 There are two sources of statutory authority. First, 18 U.S.C. § 3556 provides that a district court may or shall order restitution as part of a sentence “in accordance with” the VWPA and the
*480MVRA. In Hughey v. United States,8 the Supreme Court held that restitution under the VWPA is limited to loss to victims of the offenses of conviction; in United States v. Mancillas, this court expanded that limitation to the MVRA, allowing restitution for losses from the. same scheme, conspiracy, or pattern, in accordance with the statutory language.9 Because there was no evidence that Love’s North Carolina offenses were part of the same scheme, conspiracy, or pattern as her underlying offenses here, the district court could not — and did not — rely on § 3556 for the latter, contested order of restitution.
Instead, the court relied on the other statutory authority for restitution, 18 U.S.C. § 3583, the statute dealing with imposition of supervised release. Under § 3583(d), the court is required to impose certain conditions of supervised release, such as the condition that the defendant not commit another crime during the term of release. In addition, that section provides that
The court may order, as a further condition of supervised release, to the extent that such condition—
(1)is reasonably related to the factors set forth in section 3553(a)(1), (a)(2)(C), and (a)(2)(D);
(2) involves no greater deprivation of
liberty than is reasonably necessary for the purposes set forth in section 3553(a)(2)(B), (a)(2)(C), and (a)(2)(D); and
(3) is consistent with any pertinent policy statements issued by the Sentencing Commission pursuant to 28 U.S.C. 994(a);
any condition set forth as a discretionary condition of probation in section 3563(b)(1) through (b)(10) and (b)(12) through (b)(2), and any other condition it considers to be appropriate.10
One of the discretionary conditions of probation, section 3563(b)(2), authorizes an order of “restitution to a victim of the offense under section 3556 (but not subject to the limitation of [the VWPA] or [the MVP A]).” Love argues that the inapplicable “limitatiqn” to which § 3563(b)(2) refers is the limitation in the VWPA and the MVPA that those sections apply only to certain crimes, not the Hughey limitation that restitution must be to victims for losses resulting from the offenses of conviction. Although this argument seems correct,11 we need not rule on it because the district court explicitly did not rule on it. Rather, it ostensibly used its discretion under the last part of § 3583(d), the catch*481all provision allowing it to impose “any other condition it considers to be appropriate.”
Love contends, in a sort of ejusdem generis argument, that the court cannot order under the catch-all provision what it could not order under the specific provision.12 She finds support for this contention in United States v. Cottman, in which the Third Circuit foreclosed reliance on the catch-all provision to support a restitution order not permitted by § 3563(b)(2): “[T]he order of restitution must follow the provisions of § 3563 .... otherwise, the ‘catch-all’ exception prong of § 3583(d) would swallow the rule.”13 The Government cites three cases which it argues disagree with Cottman. Only one is arguably on point,14 United States v. Daddato, and that case may not disagree with Cott-man after all.15 In any event, again, we need not address this issue because the district court held that, even if Cottman were the rule in this circuit, the court here did not make a separate order of restitution, it merely ordered that Love pay previously ordered restitution — a general condition on supervised release proper under the catch-all provision and not addressed by the specific provision. Whether that characterization of the order is correct is the heart of this case.
To explain its characterization, the district court cited United States v. Howard, in which the district court ordered restitution as part of a sentence for bank fraud and later, upon revocation of supervised released, ordered payment of the unpaid restitution previously ordered. In rejecting an ex post facto challenge by the defendant, this court held that the “district court did not impose a second restitution order, but merely recognized the prior imposition of restitution which had not been paid when the supervised release was revoked.”16 Love argues that her case is *482different from Howard’s in a critical respect: in Howard, the same district court which convicted him ordered him to pay restitution previously ordered in the same case for the same offense. Here, by contrast, the court ordered Love to pay restitution ordered in different jurisdiction in a different case for a different offense. She argues that her case, unlike Howard’s, implicates the concern addressed in Cottman: use of the catch-all provision to circumvent the Hughey restriction of restitution to victims of the underlying offense. She also argues that the Government in United States v. Miller conceded the position she advances here.17
Moreover, Love argues, affirming the district court here would be constitutionally troubling. Both Article III, Section 2 and the Vicinage Clause of the Sixth Amendment mean that she could not have been prosecuted in the Louisiana district court for her North Carolina crimes, meaning that the lower court here could not have issued the original restitution order. She argues that allowing a district court to enforce a criminal order it could not issue is improper. Furthermore, she contends that ordering her to pay restitution in the North Carolina case effects double jeopardy.18
We agree with the district court that its order was not a new order of restitution, and thus proper under § 3583(d). It is critical to remember that our task here is to interpret a statute— does the catch-all provision in § 3583(d) authorize the order at issue, or does it not? Love makes a good ejusdem generis argument, but the strong countervailing evidence of statutory intent, combined with the broad text of the catch-all provision, outweigh that instructive canon. It is clear that Congress thinks people on supervised release must not commit other crimes,19 and it would be contempt for Love not to pay the restitution ordered by the North Carolina district court.20 Fur*483thermore, Congress has stated that parents on supervised release must obey previously existing child support orders issued by any court — a condition almost identical to the one here.21 While it is probable that the catch-all provision would not allow a court to order in the first instance restitution for which Congress implicitly has denied authorization by not allowing it under § 3563 (b)(2), the catch-all provision does allow a court to order compliance with a previously existing order, a practice of which Congress has specifically indicated approval.22
We are not persuaded by Love’s constitutional arguments. As the Government points out, no one has successfully challenged the imposition of the child support condition on constitutional grounds.23 More importantly, we disagree with her contention; critical to both of her arguments, that the court below was punishing Love for her North Carolina crimes. The court was setting a condition of supervised release for her present crimes, which constitutes punishment for those crimes. All conditions of supervised release restrict a defendant’s freedom, and a defendant who has committed crimes in the past may have her freedom restricted more than a first-time offender. Treating a defendant with a record differently than a defendant without a record does not necessarily mean that you are subjecting the former to double jeopardy or somehow trying the defendant in an improper venue.24
*484Having rejected Love’s ejusdem generis argument, we note that a condition imposed under the catch-all provision must still satisfy the factors in § 3583(d)(1)-(3) — that it is related to a punitive goal, is no greater than necessary, and is consistent with a policy statement of the Sentencing Commission. Because Love does not challenge on appeal the district court’s application of those factors, we do not address the issue.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is
AFFIRMED.