He might, but is that a problem? Not really. There's still no reason to believe he's a danger to anybody. Resisting arrest isn't in or of itself some capital offense. It's a ing misdemeanor.
This is the second time you've tried to push for some equivalency in responsibility. Cops and civilians aren't two species learning to co-exist. Cops serve us, not the other way around. They made the choice to be our servants, and that comes with asymmetrical risk and responsibility. If they can't handle that, they can quit, become civilians again and enjoy the asymmetrical relationship from the other side. Being an officer is a job, not an elevated social class.
Okay, I'm getting a bit worried. Do you really think cops are usually disadvantaged by the law? Do you really think of the millions of police interactions that happen every year, that cops are the ones getting in trouble? Like we can debate ideals, but if you're trying to argue this from a position of fact, it's fundamentally wrong. Many, many laws are set up to give police the benefit of the doubt and to shield them from liability. This isn't even just in cases of wrongful death. Police get away with a lot of crimes, from small ones like traffic violations to big ones like domestic violence.
Back to ideals, cops are the ones who should get raked over the fire in terms of media coverage. Civilians serve at their own behest, and the law is made to punish them. The media (and public opinion) is there to hold the government, of which police are representatives, accountable. A guy like Wright can be a criminal or the s of the Earth or whatever -- who cares? Dude's dead. But how the officer acts matters because it determines what relationship we have with our law enforcement and what standard or training and rationality we can hold them to.
That's the job. If they don't want to take that risk, they need to quit. Blues Lives Don't Matter as much as civilian lives. That doesn't mean that they have to throw their lives away, but it does mean they can't use the same fear standards that regular people use.
Of course, being a cop isn't actually that risky. Cops are way more likely to die due to health complications from their ty lifestyles/work schedules than anything to do with criminals gunning them down.