Several issues, people of color includes more than black, so no. Also, you will notice that list has a whole category for unknown races. 2017 it was 84, 2018 it was 204, 2019 it was 202, and 2020 is 146 so far. What groups do you think make up that unknown? I would be willing to wager that not many white people end up in that category, but I would be willing to bet quite a few black people do. So your metric is very likely screwed from the start.
You are also conflating 2 very different things. There is no debate that white people interact far more annually with cops, regardless of demographic make-up. FBI data indicates that white people average 3.6 million more total interactions yearly and 100,000 more just for violent offenses alone. Because of this fact alone, if interactions result in casualty, statistically, white people should be the victim of that far more often than not. However, the data easily shows that is not the case. No only that, when you factor in all races, white people still far exceed in police interaction, whether violent or non-violent. In 2017, 530 people of color where killed by cops, compared to 457 white people. In 2018, 597 people of color compared to 399 white. in 2019, 634 people of color compared to 370 white. So far, in 2020, 343 people of color, 215 white. Unless you are blind or just don't want to accept the truth, it is very easy to see just being a person of color in this country, makes you far more at risk of being killed by cops.
Again, I ask, what caused the deadly interactions of George Floyd, Eric Garner, Philando Castille, Atatina Jefferson. Breonna Taylor, Stephon Clark, Botham Jean, Alton Sterling, Michelle Cusseaux, Freddie Gray, Eric Garner, Akai Gurley, Tamir Rice, Tanisha Anderson to name a few?
Also, why, last night, did the cops run right past the white guy carrying an assault rifle, who just publicly shot 3 people, killing 2, and into the crowd of mostly black protestors who were trying to help stop him?