This study discusses police use of surveillance footage to solve crimes in urban locations and in marginalized neighborhoods, and in particular explores how surveillance cameras and the quality of video they produce result in differential displays of crime. Videos of young people being kidnapped in downtown Mexico City reveal that surveillance systems in marginalized areas are of consistently poor definition and clarity, which contrasts sharply with the clear and distinct images produced by video surveillance in financial, commercial, and upscale residential districts. Social inequality is revealed between the high-quality surveillance systems in the middle- and high-income protective bubbles that exclude the ‘dangerous classes’ and the low-quality and poorly functioning surveillance systems that are operational in low-income and ‘dangerous’ areas. The article shows how surveillance cameras function not only as mechanisms to prevent and solve crimes but also as instruments of the government that seek to ensure and manage order in urban areas.