You can use acetic acid instead of HCl to protonate the problematic amine - this keeps your pH range more Boc/THP friendly. But it may not help with the problematic amine hydrogenolysis.
I have no personal experience with ROBn ROBz, try it and see.
What reagents are you planning to use?
There are several oxydation methods. The first one uses NaIO
4/RuO
2. This method was first reported in Tetrahedron letter, Vol 24, No.36, pp 3829-3830,1983.
The second method uses Iodine centered radicals, which is not commercially available.(J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1996, 118,7716-7730)
The third one uses DDQ with photoirradiation. It will be a pain in the ass when scale up the reaction. (Tetrahedron Letter, 46, 2005, 7307-7309)
There is another one converting BnO to AcO using AcBr. I assuming this reaction is kind of acidic and has to be water free.(J. Org. Chem., 2009, 74, 1367-1370)
I tried AcOH yesterday. The starting material is stable even in pure AcOH. However, AcOH is not acidic enough to free palladium from amine. There is a similar result reported in Tetrahedron 54(1998) 13981-13996.
One approach was successful yesterday in small scale. 1.1eq HCl was used to ionize the amine, while the volume of solvent was increased to higher the pH. In this condition, the volume is 100mL/mmol. I will try this again in a little bit larger scale.