The auroral acceleration region plays an important role in the magnetosphere-ionosphere coupling system. In this study, signatures of an auroral U-shaped potential structure were found for the first time in the near-equatorial inner magnetosphere by the Arase satellite at ~6.0 RE geocentric distance and 11˚ magnetic latitude. The observed magnetic and electric field variations corresponded to the equatorward motion of the upward field-aligned current and converging perpendicular electric field. Examining the three-dimensional velocity distribution function of H+ and O+ ions, we demonstrate that upflowing ion beams were significantly deflected in an east-west direction with a perpendicular velocity up to ~80 km/s, which is consistent with the ExB drift velocity. A simple particle drift model with the inferred auroral perpendicular potential presents a new kink-like drift path of ions from the magnetotail, implying that the auroral potential structure has a great impact on particle dynamics in the near-earth plasma sheet.