Bitsadze attended Tbilisi State University, Faculty of Law, and received a Ph.D. from USSR Scientific Institute for Prosecutors.
[1] Bitsadze resigned his position on 29 October 2008, claiming that a campaign to discredit the agency was underway because his wife, the former parliamentary chairperson, had withdrawn into opposition to the current government.
In March 2009, several party activists, including a driver of Badri Bitsadze, were arrested by the Georgian police on arms charges.
[5] In early June 2011, Deputy Prosecutor General David Sakvarelidze said he had requested the Tbilisi City Court issue an arrest warrant for Badri Bitsadze, who was accused of organizing attacks on policemen during anti-governmental protests in May 2011 in an alleged "Egyptian scenario" to overthrow the government and did not pay 100,000 Lari for bail.
[6][7] His whereabouts were not clear, however on July 25, Nino Burjanadze gave an interview, where she stated that her husband would seek for political asylum.