IDK. I think the question is disingenuous, here's why.
Disingenuous means insincere or willfully ignorant, I assure you it's not.

Everything is a crime in the US. When I walk across the street and there's no posted crosswalk, I'm breaking the law.
When I use the word "criminal" I definitely do not think of jaywalkers. I mean it's a ridiculous law, do the cops even take it seriously? Has anyone been shot for jaywalking? Jailed?

I'm a criminal. I've been arrested twice. Once for driving with expired license plates, and once for possession of marijuana.

Did you get convicted by a court? Or did you get cautioned, or whatever the USA equivalent is? Because a slap on the wrists doesn't make you a criminal. A conviction makes you a criminal. Or maybe making a living through illicit activity and never getting caught, I'm happy that person is still a criminal. But getting caught with weed doesn't make you a criminal, not unless you faced a court. Is it legal in your state yet?

Does every crime deserve a death sentence? No judge, no trial, no jury, just death on the spot?

Of course not, but I do think cops should be armed in a nation where the people are armed, and I do think cops should be able to use minimal force to neutralise a threat. Minimal might mean lethal force if the threat is strong enough. Obviously what happened to Floyd is not minimal force, there is no reason that guy should be dead. But he still chose a life of a criminal. He didn't jaywalk into it.

Did you know that the statistics show that the least gun-carrying race in the US is black people?
I.e. the odds of a black person carrying a gun are lower than the odds of any other race carrying a gun?
This is interesting but doesn't come close to telling the full story. What about in Chicago? Or whichever location we're talking about where a black guy gets shot? I don't know how much that figure is skewed by rednecks and their shotguns, a different demographic to homies with pistols.