With several hundred hours of turbo ops in my logbook, I'd have to say don't run mogas in any turbo'd airplane, whether it's legal or not, whether you're going to be caught by the feds or not. The risk to the engine is just too great, especially if as occasionally happens with the 3rd throttle of a Rajay, you forget to pull it out before pushing the primary throttle in on a go around. Overboosting is one thing; overboosting combined with pinging from too low an octane is something else, and very destructive. The amount you save per gallon will never pay for the potential damage to the engine.
BTW, have you considered how little you really save, running mogas? If you burn 14 gph, you're saving roughly $2/gallon or $28/hour. If you run 100 hours a year, that's $2,800. That's a lot in beer money, but not so much when it concerns engine maintenance. In my case, burning 9.8 gph, it would be less than $2,000 per 100 hour year, but I run closer to 60 hours per year, or only $1,200; is that enough to replace valves and cylinders that might be damaged by running too low an octane fuel? Add to your cost the equipment necessary to fuel your airplane (assuming mogas isn't pumped at the airport), consider the added risk of a fueling disaster, and the time it takes to do the mogas fueling, is it really worth it? If I could knock off $2/gallon without any of those issues, I'd love to do it, but for now, I'll stick with 100LL.
Cary