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Being fired for your actions is a pretty ambiguous arena. If you do something that is strictly against company policy, then you can be fired as long as it doesn't alienate your basic rights under federal and state employment laws.
If you are hourly, you have more rights than if you are salaried. If you are in a state which is a "right to work", then you can be let go with even fewer repercussions. You might need to ask yourself what is it that you want to accomplish?
If you want them to rehire you, that one is going to be very improbable. If you want some kind of settlement or monetary judgement on early or improper termination, you will have to prove what they did wrong, how, when and have as much documentation as possible.
What it means is, in the end, if you want to fight them... it is going to cost you your own money to hopefully win your case in the long run.
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