Not directly, no. It simply reports the final state of the connection as "Established" instead of "Both FIN", even though the connection does not exist in the state table any more. This is misleading but technically correct as that was indeed the final connection state before it was removed from the state table, and the state of the TCP connection itself between the two endpoints did not actually change at that time. If you see a state of "Established" but need to determine if the connection is still present in the state table, look at the "Expire Time" and "Last Hit" items in the same log card. Enabling Accounting on the relevant rule may also help in this regard.
Also be aware that even if the TCP connection is ended by a RST sent by one of the hosts, the final connection state is still reported as "Both FIN" as if the two hosts had performed a graceful FIN, FIN-ACK, ACK. Also misleading, really wish it would say "RST" instead to clarify that one of the hosts killed the connection ungracefully. Could save the firewall a lot of blame...
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