The part of a sentence "in charge of not" is grammatically correct and can be used in written English. It is typically used to indicate someone's responsibility for something they are not supposed to do or have control over. Example: As the manager of the project, I am in charge of ensuring that no deadlines are missed.
He is now in charge of not only Mint.com, but also all of Quicken's online and desktop products.
One possible change could be the appointment of a senior England team manager - in the mould of New Zealand's Darren Shand - who would be in charge of not only logistics but also team discipline.
For a government which likes to reinforce the impression that it is in charge of not just the staging but the script, Hong Kong was an uncomfortable discovery that the props can get up and misbehave.
And while that seems like a no-brainer, putting you in charge of not only what you read but what actually gets published, this new process is wholly reshaping a centuries-old industry.
That decision will either garner positive results or not, but either way they will be in charge of that, not you.
Under the programme Iraq is in charge of distribution not the UN.
Because, ultimately, that's the point: you should be in charge of media, not the other way around.
He made such an impact that many thought he was minister in charge of disability, not a mere parliamentary secretary.
Famously, through Richard Nixon's 1972 visit to Beijing, it recognized the people actually in charge of China, not those the United States wished were in charge.
Grisham quoted from an affidavit by co-conspirator Rodney Lamont Fuller: "As between Mrs. Lewis and Shallenberger, Shallenberger was definitely the one in charge of things, not Mrs. Lewis".
I was in charge of a not-for-profit".
Ludwig does not simply clarify my doubts with English writing, it enlightens my writing with new possibilities
Simone Ivan Conte
Software Engineer at Adobe, UK